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Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
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One of Intel's major new initiatives has been to push its processors down into more energy-efficient designs over the next few years. The first step in the process was introducing a new class of laptops dubbed "Ultrabooks". The first Ultrabook demoed was an ASUS model that bore a close resemblance to the MacBook Air, and Intel feels that these ultra-thin and light laptops could make up 40% of the consumer laptop market by the end of 2012.

asus_ultrabook.jpg



DigiTimes reports, however, that manufacturers are having trouble pricing their new machines under Apple's MacBook Air, raising concerns about their prospects for market success.
The sources pointed out that the new MacBook Airs are priced at about US$999-1,599 with rather strong demand in the US; however, designing an ultrabook based on Intel's technical suggestions will still be unable to reduce the machine's price level to lower than the MacBook Air's unless Intel is willing to reduce its prices, which already account for one-third of the total cost.
Intel's effort to match the MacBook Air's thin profile has seen the company push forward its new platform with more components integrated directly onto the machines' circuit boards and using non user-replaceable batteries, mirroring Apple's own steps. Those requirements have, however, pushed up the cost of those components beyond that of the modular ones typically used in PCs, resulting in Ultrabook pricing coming in at the same levels as Apple's MacBook Air.

Article Link: Intel Ultrabooks Unable to Undercut MacBook Air Prices
 

nwcs

macrumors 68030
Sep 21, 2009
2,722
5,262
Tennessee
Add to this that Apple has had the first mover advantage for a couple years now. Hard for others to excel unless they can undercut Apple or outperform them.
 

apeden

macrumors member
Jul 21, 2011
56
0
What ever apple makes, everyone else has to follow behind them. But they can never make their product as good as the apple product :apple:
 

HarryKeogh

macrumors 6502a
Jun 25, 2008
609
863
Apple has such a great head start in the ultra-thin notebook pc and the tablet markets.

Apple's last 10 years have been a blueprint on how to totally dominate the market. That Steve Jobs is a bright kid.
 

plumosa

macrumors regular
Mar 17, 2007
178
9
Australia
I'm forwarding this to a few naysayers in the family. It ought to keep them a little bit more quiet!
 

usptact

macrumors regular
Apr 2, 2011
157
0
resemblance? If we account properties as screen, keyboard, folding and thin factor, then yes - it's Apple! :D
 

Daveoc64

macrumors 601
Jan 16, 2008
4,074
92
Bristol, UK
I really felt the last updated MBA was aggressively priced for what it is. Now this just proves it. Let's hear that Macs are overpriced now?! :rolleyes:

It's entirely possible to say that the MBA is overpriced.

It's Apple's entry level product.

I'm not prepared to pay a premium for a (slow) computer just because it's thinner.

For what you're getting it might be good value, but it's now your only choice other than a "pro" machine.
 

KnightWRX

macrumors Pentium
Jan 28, 2009
15,046
4
Quebec, Canada
Hardly surprising. Apple's MacBook Air pricing has been very aggressive since the Rev D. For the price, you get a very light notebook and for people looking at size and weight as specs, there's hardly anything out there to compete with it.
 

farmermac

macrumors 6502a
Jul 23, 2009
779
11
Iowa
funny how Apple can innovate and create new categories of products over and over, and still be cheaper than the competition. Same deal with tablets. They are stomping on everyone in overall design and quality of ecosystem, and they're not being undercut price-wise.
 

mmcc

macrumors regular
Nov 8, 2010
107
22
Tennessee
The new 13.3" MacBook Air is an amazing product. It packs quite a punch in a very thin and light package. It is as fast as my last year's 17" Pro -- actually much faster at reading/writing to the disk. The Air's SSD is the way of the future. Please, please buy SSDs now so the price can come down for the rest of us. I want a SSD in every computer I own. ;)

If Apple can bring a similar Air design to a 15" laptop at near the same price as the current Pro, watch out!
 

gullySn0wCat

macrumors 6502
Dec 7, 2010
396
0
Well, looks like everyone is feeling the pain of Apple using it's loot to buy up all that manufacturing capacity. Can't make a machine cheaper than Apple? Burrrrrn!

I mean, if you had posted this and that article about Apple having more money than the GOVERNMENT 10 or even 5 years ago, people would have laughed their asses off!
 

KnightWRX

macrumors Pentium
Jan 28, 2009
15,046
4
Quebec, Canada
So by the logic of the h:apple:ters, this means that the PC manufacturers are even more greedy than :apple:

:D

Apple has never quite been overpriced like some people like to claim, not when you compare the PC market close to a refresh, and you compare spec for spec.

A lot of the "MBA is overpriced!" crap comes from people who completely ignore size and weight. Same for the Mac Mini really, SFF PCs are not really cheaper.
 

nylonsteel

macrumors 68000
Nov 5, 2010
1,550
490
re original article
nice try intel but you guys dont have jony ive working for you
btw havent heard much about ive lately - hope he's cooking up something really "magical" - another game changer
aapl is running in top form
 

gullySn0wCat

macrumors 6502
Dec 7, 2010
396
0
Apple has never quite been overpriced like some people like to claim, not when you compare the PC market close to a refresh, and you compare spec for spec.

Apple's mid-range machines are hideously overpriced for what they are. Their low and very high end (as long as you buy your own RAM! lol) machines are usually priced much more competitively, to the surprise and chagrin of haters.
 

griz

macrumors 6502a
Dec 18, 2003
583
222
New London, NH
It's entirely possible to say that the MBA is overpriced.

It's Apple's entry level product.

I'm not prepared to pay a premium for a (slow) computer just because it's thinner.

For what you're getting it might be good value, but it's now your only choice other than a "pro" machine.

It's still faster than the white macbook was so what's the problem?
 

fertilized-egg

macrumors 68020
Dec 18, 2009
2,109
57
It's entirely possible to say that the MBA is overpriced.

It's Apple's entry level product.

I'm not prepared to pay a premium for a (slow) computer just because it's thinner.

It is overpriced for its performance but not for its fit&finish nor the form factor. It has happened quite for sometime. When iRiver and other tried to match iPod, when AOpen(anybody remember this?) tried to match the Mac Mini, or when Dell and Samsung tried to match Macbook Air, the competing non-Apple product with similar credentials ended up costing more than the Apple product.

Plus in most of those cases, Apple still had an edge in build quality and design. For instance, while Dell Adamo and Samsung Series 9 are very well built devices, they just don't have the level of solidity as a whole because they don't have the same unibody construction. It's pretty unfortunate in a way that even after 3 years or so since the introduction of unibody Macbook Pro the competition still haven't caught up.
 

hayesk

macrumors 65816
May 20, 2003
1,459
101
I can't feel sorry for these companies. Their business model has always been to forgo R&D costs so they could build knock-offs at cut-rate prices. Well, now it's come back to bite them. They should have known that R&D is more than UI and case design. Manufacturing would come into play too. Can they really say they didn't see this coming? If so, maybe this business isn't for them.
 
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