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Consumer shipments were down by 7.6 per cent, with three vendors alone – HP, Toshiba and Dell – combining for a 43.2 per cent decline in shipment volume. Commercial shipments were also down by 9.2 per cent, with much of the decline coming from the SMB segment where buying behaviour tends to mimic the consumer channel.
One of the few bright spots of the quarter was Apple with the release of its Retina Macbook Pro, which helped the vendor post growth of 52.4 per cent and take second place in the consumer portable rankings for the first time.
With its higher prices, Apple also helped drive average selling prices higher. With Apple with battery like Toshiba PA3380U-1ACA Ac Adapter , Toshiba PA3396U-1ACA Ac Adapter , Toshiba PA3432U-1ACA Ac Adapter , Toshiba PA3467U-1ACA Ac Adapter , Toshiba PA3468U-1ACA Ac Adapter , Toshiba V000061300 Ac Adapter , Toshiba Libretto 100CT Ac Adapter , Toshiba Portege 2010 Ac Adapter , Toshiba Libretto U100 Ac Adapter , Toshiba Portege M200 Ac Adapter , Toshiba Portege M700 Ac Adapter , Toshiba Portege R500 Ac Adapter , the average selling price was up $199 to $835, but without Apple factored in it was up just $25, to $636. Apple accounted for 38.7 per cent of consumer portable revenue in the quarter on just 14.5 per cent of units shipped.
On the overall vendor leaderboard, HP held onto top spot with 18.9 per cent, but declined 27 per cent over the year ago. Acer and Dell were two and three and also posted declines, while Lenovo was a bright spot in fourth with 12.5 per cent of shipments, up 28.8 per cent. Apple rounded-out top five with 10.9 per cent share, up 7.1 per cent.
Looking ahead, Brunt said IDC sees continued shipment declines through the end of next year, with a return to positive growth not likely before 2014. With PC penetration at 130 per cent or 1.3 PCs here household, the market is pretty saturated.
“At some point (sales) can't continue to grow before you see pullback, and I think that's what we're seeing now,” said Brunt.
Veeam also announced new restore capabilities for Veeam Backup & Replication. Developed in conjunction with Hewlett-Packard, Veeam Explorer for SAN Snapshots enables IT administrators to recover virtual machines (VM) and their data directly from HP LeftHand and HP StoreVirtual VSA snapshots. According to Veeam, this new capability enables admins to restore any or all of a VM directly from SAN snapshots, which can be taken throughout the day preventing major impact on production systems. This enables short recovery point objectives (RPOs) for the most common recovery scenarios: users accidentally deleting data, scripts accidentally corrupting data and system updates gone wrong. Veeam president and CEO Ratmir Timashev said the company worked with HP to develop Veeam Explorer for SAN Snapshots. Veeam's revolutionary capability enables customers to recover quickly from daily disasters using SAN snapshots they already have in place without additional cost.