Are PCs Dying? Of Course Not, Here’s Why

MetalSoup

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Reports of the PC’s demise have been greatly exaggerated. We’ve all heard that everyone’s just buying tablets and throwing out their keyboards and mice. But, if you live in the real world, you see people using PCs every day.
The statistics show that PCs are still selling in large numbers and are used much more than tablets. But we don’t need statistics to see this — we all know that huge amounts of people still use and need PCs.

Raw Statistics

PC sales are declining fast. Soon, no one will buy them anymore. Everyone’s just buying tablets, and tablet sales are skyrocketing! That’s the established wisdom, anyway. But is that what the statistics really say?
Gartner reports that 82.6 million PCs were shipped in the fourth quarter of 2013. That’s a 6.9 percent drop from the fourth quarter of 2012 and the seventh quarter in a row of declining shipments. This sounds like bad news, but the decline in PC sales has actually been slowing. Gartner believes that PC sales have “bottomed out” — while PC sales are dropping, it’s hardly a market in free fall. But it’s not really the sales that are important — it’s what people are actually using.

StatCounter’s browser usage data for January 2014 shows that desktop browsers accounted for 71.89% of visits, while mobile (smartphones) accounted for 22.42% and tablets accounted for just 5.69%. Most people are clearly using desktop web browsers to access the web. If they’re not, they’re probably using a smartphone browser — tablet browsers are far behind.
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But perhaps we’re just looking in reverse. What’s really important is the long-term trend. If tablet sales are accelerating, then tablets may just “kill” PCs.
Here’s the thing: While more tablets are being sold than ever, the growth of tablet sales is slowing. IDC reports that 76.9 million tables were shipped in the fourth quarter of 2013. That’s a 28.2% growth in shipments over the same quarter in the previous year, but that previous quarter had an 87.1% growth over its previous year. In other words, tablet sales are growing more slowly — sales aren’t accelerating, but are slowing down. Many of these tablets are also cheaper, smaller, lower-end tablets that are even less prepared to replace a PC than premium tablets like the iPad. IDC concludes that “markets such as the U.S. are reaching high levels of consumer saturation.”
And, did you catch that? In spite of all the doom and gloom, more PCs than tablets were shipped worldwide in the fourth quarter of 2013.

We Don’t Need to Replace PCs As Often

IDC used a word — “saturation” — that perfectly describes a big part of what’s going on. You don’t have to replace your computer as often as you used to. There was a time when each new version of Windows, Office, and even web browsers was heavier than ever. You saw a big speed improvement when you bought a new computer. You needed to keep buying new computers, because Windows Vista definitely wouldn’t run very well on that PC you bought when Windows XP came out. Today, Windows 7 and 8 run faster than Windows Vista on the same hardware. Even gaming PCs built years ago can likely still run the latest PC games at high settings.
People just don’t have to replace their PCs as often, so of course PC sales are falling. PCs have reached a point where they’re “good enough.” People aren’t scrambling to upgrade their PCs every few years — they’re replacing them only when they need to. People have more PCs — laptops and even desktops — lying around than ever.
On the other hand, tablets are still a new thing. Many people still don’t have tablets, so people are buying them more and more. If you want a new gadget and you’re perfectly happy with your laptop, of course you’re going to buy a tablet instead. And, like smartphones, tablets are improving faster than ever. Tablets from a few years ago have noticeably worse screens and slower hardware. They’re improving fast, just like PCs used to. You’ll see more of a benefit from upgrading an iPad that’s a few generations old than you will a laptop that’s a few generations old. Eventually, tablets will get to that “good enough” point where people won’t have to upgrade every few years, too. Tablet sales will slow and people will be saying “tablets are dying” because everyone is buying those new virtual reality headsets instead.
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You can read the rest at the source
 
My argument is this: how can PC's being a dying breed when consoles are essentially scaled-down gaming computers. If anything, things are becoming MORE PC-like. So to say it's a dying breed is daft in the very least.

What I do believe though, is that the "gaming PC" as we know it (along with it's technicalities etc.) is slowly being dumbed down to a point where owning a "next-gen" console offers the exact same experience. But, in the end, those consoles are still pretty much PC's anyways.
 
The article makes a very good point about saturation and buying replacements, PCs last a lot longer than other devices.
 
Good article, I agree with the statement that PC's have reached a stage where you don't need to upgrade as often. I've had the same machine for over 4 years now and I'm sill able to get plenty gaming enjoyment out of it.
 
Good article, I agree with the statement that PC's have reached a stage where you don't need to upgrade as often. I've had the same machine for over 4 years now and I'm sill able to get plenty gaming enjoyment out of it.

Yeah; years ago there was this surge of technical brilliance which lead to monumental gains in performance year in year out. But now they seemed to have reached that point where increases are linear instead of exponential.
 
Regarding the PC sales stats, they also need to take into account that there are a lot more people now that buy individual parts and build their own machine, and every year or so just replace a part or 2 , that extends the life cycle of the PC by much longer than it used to,
 
Regarding the PC sales stats, they also need to take into account that there are a lot more people now that buy individual parts and build their own machine, and every year or so just replace a part or 2 , that extends the life cycle of the PC by much longer than it used to,

Indeed. It's becoming less and less commonplace to have people buy a new system from scratch
 
Indeed. It's becoming less and less commonplace to have people buy a new system from scratch

PC Wise I think everyone is just waiting for the next "big thing". Before it was multicore processing which has been massively improved over the past few years. Very few people need an i7 and even less are going to spend big money on a slightly improved version of that( think public perception.) Even Next-Gen consoles technologically aren't "innovating"in the sense that we're used to. Depends on what's next.

Quantum computing anyone?
 
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