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Media-Saturn's Online Retail Dates

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Metro Group CEO Eckhard Cordes announces the dates for Media-Saturn's entry into online retail, in an interview with the Welt am Sonntag.

Media SaturnSaturn will go online in Q4 2011, while Media Markt will do so in Q1 2012-- meaning Saturn will be ready to take advantage of the holiday season.

This won't be Media-Saturn's first entry into online retail, mind. Just last April the group took over Redcoon, an retailer operating in 10 European countries.

Redcoon will continue operating alongside Saturn and Media Markt's online offerings, in a way Eckhard hopes will lead to Metro's taking over a share of at least 30% of the German online retail market.

Meanwhile Media-Saturn goes through other troubles-- police and prosecution officials search its offices and Inglostadt HQ as part of an investigation involving bribery allegations, according to the Süddeutsche Zeitung.

Go Welt am Sonntag Interview

Go Police Raid at Media-Saturn (Süddeutsche Zeitung)

eReaders: Hanvon Loses the Plot

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How does a nice handwriting-input software company get into a mess like this?

HanvonHanvon Technology developed software for handwriting-input pen in 1998 and expanded to include the Hanvon Pen series, the Graphic Tablet series, the OCR series and Intelligent Telephone series.

The first company in the world to incorporate Chinese handwriting recognition technology into PDA and mobile phone devices, Hanvon now owns a manufacturing campus, four advanced design centers, and operates over 5800 sales channels across China and in 20 countries across world. Hanvon Technology Co., Ltd became a listed company in 2010.

For Europeans, Hanvon might look like a cross between the Belgian OCR company IRIS and the well-known Japanese graphics pad company Wacom. Except Hanvon has the giant China market as its home base-- a market that has plenty of natural barriers to discourage foreign competition let alone many political ones.

Hanvon did well in China...and then saw the opportunity to take its graphics pad expertise (and supply chain) into the emerging eReader market. eReaders were a big success for the graphics pad maker, who followed that up with one of the first Windows tablets in Europe.

You may even have seen their good-sized stand at CeBIT this year.

Now Hanvon Technology predicts its losses for the first half of 2011 will widen to between 165 and 175 million yuan (about 18.6 million euro). The firm blames these losses on increased competition that forced a price reduction of its electronic readers, also creating lower gross profit margins for the company and an increase in R&D costs.

Hanvon lowered prices between 15-40% and seems to be liquidating its inventory of eReaders that today contribute a whopping 75.22% of Hanvon's total revenues. IDC estimates Hanvon market share at about 8%, a percentage that earns a 4th place in worldwide ranking.

Q1, that post-Xmas quarter that most CE suppliers hate, saw both tablets and eReaders take a nose-five. The eReader market, says IDC, will see a decline in shipments to 3.3 million. Nonetheless the category's y-to-y growth was 105% as the devices continue their popularity.

IDC forecasts the eReader market will ship 16.2 million units this year worldwide, a healthy increase of 24% from 2010 figures-- if you weren't expecting 100% growth like some makers...

The Color Nook helped Barnes & Noble take the lead in eReaders for the first time. Amazon came second as the lack of a color Kindle cost the company its previous dominant position.

Only five companies now dominate the eReader market-- all the rest of the competitors fight for about 10% of the market. That's right...about 1.62 million units worldwide in 2011.

Hanvon sits on the bottom rung of the top 5, so it feels the teeth marks of the "rest" as they try to chew they way up the ladder...and Hanvon also feels the boot of the four bigger companies that want to keep their feet on the higher rungs.

The company frankly may not have had the consumer market experience it needed to compete in a vicious retail fight...graphics pads and input pens don't butt up against the likes of Amazon and Sony. And Hanvon entered a market where the biggest retailers have chosen their own brands (amazon & Kindle, Barnes & Noble with Nook).

All this would still leave you to give a lot of credit to Hanvon whose market share is credibly close to Sony (although that may be like giving credit to a young boxer fighting a  famous boxer at the end of hisaging career).

Except there's one more bit of shocking news at Hanvon: the third-largest shareholder in Hanvon (Shanghai Lianchuang) sold shares equivalent to 4.98% of total equity between June 9th and 12th and previously sold 250 million shares between April 1st and May 31st.

The Board chairman of Hanvon, Ma Xiongming, happens to be an executive at Shanghai Lianchuang and even Martha Stewart would suspect that's a coincidence that could be the recipe for a public disaster.

The Chinese financial press are calling for a public investigation on this twist that's out of character for Hanvon...and as the plot thickens, we'll have to wait to see how Hanvon will write its next chapter.

Go Hanvon's Losses

Amazon's Future Tablet Plans?

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According to DigiTimes unnamed tablet components suppliers say Amazon put orders for up to 2m touch panel displays-- suggesting Amazon will be shipping up to 1.2m tablets by September's end.

Amazon TabletSuch a shipment would make it Q3 2011's biggest non-iPad tablet supplier.

No confirmation comes from Amazon itself, which currently appears to be focusing on selling its Kindle eReaders.

Rumours suggest Amazon will have 2 tablet models-- code-named Coyote and Hollywood-- both carrying Nvidia processors (specifically the dual-core Tegra 2 for Coyote and the quad-core Kal-El for Hollywood).

Meanwhile other analysts suggest Amazon will be updating the Kindle with an LCD display and replacing its software with Google's Android.

Should such rumours prove true, Amazon will be entering a crowded arena-- even if Amazon does have one ace up its sleeve, to other vendors' detriment. That ace is, of course, its main business in online shopping, where it currently sells other manufacturers' devices.

Will Amazon drop other tablets from its website should "Coyote" and "Hollywood" prove to be true? Amazon.com doesn't carry any Kindle rivals, after all. Some manufacturers will have reason to feel a little betrayed in that case.

Go DigiTimes (subscription required)

Velocity Micro Pays Up to Microsoft

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cruzVelocity Micro is the next company to fall foul of Microsoft's IP shakedown, following HTC and General Dynamics Itronix into signing a settlement for the use of unspecified mobile patents.

The Microsoft IP-using devices in question are Velocity's Android-based Cruz tablets-- and Velocity will pay the price through royalty payments.

Analysts believe HTC pays something around $5 for every Android device it sells-- windfalls dwarfing what Microsoft earns through Windows Phone-- and that Microsoft is looking at even higher fees.

Now one only wonders if Microsoft will continue continue tracking down other companies selling Android-based devices for IP infringement...

Go Microsoft and Velocity Micro Sign Patent Agreement

Go Microsoft Received 5 Times More Income From Android Than Windows Phone

The Fall and Fall of the PC Notebook

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There are no doubts about it-- tablets have hit the WW notebook PC market hard. Further confirmation of this comes from a SplatF chart comparing notebook sales (the industry overall and HP) with Apple's.

Things were much brighter for the notebook market back in 2009, with notebook sales reaching growth totalling 20 - 40% Y-o-Y. Current notebook growth is now but a fraction of its former self, and is basically flat.

notebook shipments

The notebook's fall coincides with the iPad's rise. Notebook growth for Q1 2011 is, well, 0%-- while Apple growth totals 53% Y-o-Y.

SplatF says while the iPad is making life difficult for the PC notebook, Apple's Macbook business is "still growing impressively". We'll see if that continues to be the case once Apple reveals its Q2 2011 (a full quarter of iPad 2 sales) totals next week.

Go The Notebook PC Market Has Hit the Wall (SplatF)

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