Analysts say Microsoft Corp. could see growth in
the tablet market as consumer purchases slow down, and large enterprise
purchases -- at schools, businesses and government offices -- speed up.
Tablet and hybrid computer sales fell for the first time
during the last quarter of 2014, and IDC analysts have scaled back their
expectations for sales in the next five years. The tablet market will
begin to grow, but slowly, the company claims, but not at the rate that
manufacturers saw when they were first released in 2010.
Global tablet sales will reach 234.5 million, up just
2.1 percent from last year, IDC said in a research report published on Thursday. The growth has slowed, but the market will look much better than it did last quarter.
Tablet sales have been impacted by the popularity of larger smartphones, or phablets, like Apple Inc.’s iPhone 6 Plus. As screen sizes on phones grow closer to those on tablets, consumers see little value in purchasing both.
There will still be demand for tablets’ larger screen size
from enterprise customers looking for functions not available on
smartphones. Business clients looking to use Office are likely to prefer
tablets’ larger screen size, potentially increasing the popularity of
Microsoft’s Surface tablets, which run Windows.
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