Rent-to-own News

Rent-to-own News - 'Ultrabooks" offer quick booting, slim computing at lower cost

January 3, 2012

Intel Corp.'s crusade to redefine the personal computer is entering a crucial phase, as a new breed of sleek skinny laptops jostle with tablet-style devices and smartphones for consumer attention.

PC makers are turning out at next weeks Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas to show off entries in a new category called Ultrabooks, a term the chip giant coined as part of an effort to spur its customers to make more desirable products, The Wall Street Journal reports.

Making portables smaller is hardly a new idea. Backers of Ultrabooks, inspired largely by Apple Inc.'s distinctive MacBook Air, hope to take stylish designs that typically command a premium to mainstream price points. Though Ultrabooks mostly start at roughly $899 to $1,400, hardware companies expect to soon reach more consumer-friendly prices of $699 or lower.

Ultrabooks also take a page from Apple's iPad tablet computer by booting up more quickly and operating longer on a battery charge than conventional laptops. Backers expect future models to exploit touch screens, with some converting between tablet and clamshell-style configurations.

The stakes are high for many companies—but particularly for Intel and Microsoft Corp., dominant suppliers to PC makers whose growth rates have been surpassed as demand has swelled for other kinds of mobile devices. Sales of tablets across the globe, for example, are expected to rise nearly 63% in 2012 to more than 103 million units, predicts research firm Gartner Inc. World-wide PC shipments, by contrast, are expected to rise 4.5% to about 370 million units.

But Apple continues to prove that attractive design can have a big impact, posting a 26% jump in unit sales for its Macintosh PCs in the quarter ended in September compared with a year earlier—reaching a quarterly record for the company largely because of the MacBook Air.

That portable Mac, first introduced in 2008 at an entry price of $1,799, became more popular after a revamp in late 2010 that set the entry price at $999 and made fast-booting memory chips a standard feature to store data rather than disk drives.

Intel expects the more attractive size and features of Ultrabooks to transform the laptop category, bolstered by plans to roll out successive generations of chips to help drive up performance and battery life. Though not many Ultrabooks are quite as thin as the MacBook Air—which tapers from a thickness of 0.68 inch to 0.11 inch at one point—Intel expects dimensions to shrink rapidly.

Intel predicts Ultrabooks will account for about 40% of consumer portable PC sales in 2012. Some market researchers expect a slower transition; IHS iSuppli sees Ultrabooks hitting 43% of world-wide notebook PC shipments by 2015.

H-P, the world's largest personal-computer maker, unveiled an Ultrabook in November called "Folio 13." The company puts the laptop's thickness at roughly half the diameter of a dime, and its battery life at about nine hours. It costs about $900.

Lower pricing will be crucial, industry executives and analysts say. One obstacle is flash memory, which tends to be a costly alternative to disk-based data storage, though chip prices keep coming down.

Toshiba, for example, has offered an entry-level Ultrabook—which ordinarily sells for $799—in a limited-time promotion at electronics retailer Best Buy Co. for $699 during the holiday season. Toshiba, a major maker of flash-memory chips, says manufacturing some of its own components helps reduce costs.

In all, Intel said 10 or 11 Ultrabook models were likely to have shipped by the end of 2011, with about 60 designs in the pipeline for 2012. The company is hosting a news conference on Jan. 9, the day before the formal opening of the Consumer Electronics Show, which is expected to showcase new Ultrabooks and marketing plans for them.

While it is hard to imagine thin designs turning off consumers, establishing Ultrabooks as a separate product category might be a taller order. Consumers could get confused as manufacturers introduce similar-looking laptops without the Ultrabook name.

Advanced Micro Devices Inc. tends to use the phrase "ultrathin notebooks," because the term Ultrabook has been trademarked by Intel and requires use of its chips. Consumers might have some suspicions about new product categories, after what they "just went through with netbooks," said John Taylor, AMD's director of global product marketing.

Read more.
 

About APRO
The Association of Progressive Rental Organizations is the official voice of the rent-to-own industry and the most accurate and trustworthy source of rent-to-own news in the industry. Founded in 1980, APRO is the national, nonprofit trade association advocating and representing the rent-to-own industry before the U.S. Congress, state legislatures, courts, media and the public.

For more information, visit www.rtohq.org.




2012 APRO Convention and Trade Show

July 24-26, Memphis, TN

Attendee Information

Exhibitor Information

Thank you APRO 2012 Sponsors

Get Social with RTOHQ.org!
Watch RTOHQ Rent to Own videos on YouTube!
Follow RTOHQ on Twitter!
Join RTOHQ on Facebook!
Share RTOHQ and bookmark your favorites
Featured APRO Photo:
From the 2009 Midwest RTO Expo Album
2009 Midwest RTO Expo

View All RTO Photos
in the RTOHQ.org gallery
RTOHQ: The Magazine
RTOHQ: The Magazine is the Association of Progressive Rental Organizations' award-winning rent-to-own industry magazine, and it's available here.

CLICK HERE FOR OUR DIGITAL RTOHQ: THE MAGAZINE

 

RTOHQ: The Magazine’s upgraded digital format

APRO's new, mobile-ready magazine is now available in addition to our print edition. The digital format provides the same informative content as our printed magazine, but also offers tools to make the reading experience more enriching. Access the table of contents page with one click or tap. Get additional information from advertisers by clicking on the links in their ads. The interface is easy to navigate and requires no special app—read our magazine on your computer, digital table or smartphone. Click here to access the digital version of RTOHQ: The Magazine March-April 2012.

 

 

A New Rent-to-Own Experience

by Neil Ferguson

Here’s the lowdown on APRO’s 2012 Convention and Trade Show, July 24-26 in Memphis. The RTO industry’s big event will offer many valuable experiences, including insights on how to turn your stores into “experiences”–the good kind for consumers

 

Who Is Your Competition?

by Bill Keese

In order to expand your customer base, you can learn a lot by observing your competitors. But first, you need to figure out just who they are. If you think your only competition is the rent-to-own store down the street, you’re not considering the bigger picture. APRO’s executive director offers a big-picture perspective.

 

A Review of Online Customer Complaints

by Ed Winn III

While rent-to-own companies have not cornered the market on negative reviews posted on consumer complaint websites, it’s no surprise that there are cyberspace beefs against RTO. APRO’s general counsel reviews some of them in search of a pattern and he considers appropriate response to online complaints.

 

Rent-to-Own Families, Part VIII

by Kristen Card

Our series of family-run rent-to-own businesses continues with profiles of the Homeiers in Kansas and two Texas-based sets of kindred colleagues, the Spangles and the Weisblatts.

 

 

Future issues of APRO's magazine will be available in this same new format. Click here to access past issues that are not yet archived in the new interface.

 

Association of Progressive Rental Organizations
1504 Robin Hood Trail
Austin, Texas 78703
800/204-2776, ext. 103
Fax 512/794-0097