Demand for ultramobile devices — such as netbooks and MIDs (mobile internet devices) — will match that of notebook PCs by 2013, according to research.
Shipments of ultramobile devices will grow from 10 million units this year to over 200 million in 2013, ABI Research said in a statement on Wednesday.
This puts the market on a par with the notebook-PC market, which the research analyst said will also reach around 200 million unit shipments by 2013.
According to Philip Solis, principal analyst at ABI Research, the ultramobile-device market will be worth nearly $27bn (£15bn). While small compared to the wireless-handset market, this figure is "significant" nonetheless, Solis said.
Netbooks currently account for about 90 percent of ultramobile-device shipments, but MID units will grow more rapidly, contributing 68 percent to the overall market by 2013, the report noted.
Solis added: "As this market enters its rapid-growth phase and starts to evolve, we will see considerable experimentation with different distribution channels: some will sell direct from the manufacturer, some via retail outlets and some through mobile operators who will subsidise them, to encourage new data-plan subscriptions."






Talkback
Please note that the headline of this story does not accurately reflect the statement on the subject made by ABI Research.
We said: "To put the UMD market forecasts into perspective, the 2013 estimate of 200 million shipped devices is roughly the anticipated size of the worldwide laptop PC market."
That means the *whole* UMD market, including UMPCs, MIDs, and netbooks. Netbooks, as noted in our release, "will fall to a distant second place by 2013."
Please correct this headline. Thank you.
David Halperin, Communications Manager, ABI Research
Hi Dave,
Thanks for catching the error and pointing it out. We've now fixed the headline to make sure it's accurate. I'm really sorry about this; we try very hard to make sure that this kind of thing doesn't happen. We slipped up, and we apologise.