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Sony Wants Number Two Spot in Tablets in 2012

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An entire group of reporters at CES listened as top Sony execs told them Sony wants to take the number two spot behind Apple’s iPad in terms of tablet PC sales by 2012.

"I wants don't get" may be a familiar expression in Europe but maybe not in Tokyo.

For Sony (who has yet to decide on a tablet) to become Number Two in a very, very competitive tablet world, sounds a lot like "Californian dreaming" or at least Las Vegas loose talk. You would normally dismiss this if it wasn't Sony and if it wasn't their top elite.SONY logo and mindset

“We would really like to take the no. 2 position in a year,” says Kunimasa Suzuki, deputy president of Sony Computer Entertainment.

So would many other companies who seem to be faster a foot than Sony these days.

Sony has been slow to market because "it is carefully considering how to create a distinct product" to stand out from the tablet deluge.

“We have to put a table on the market that’s differentiated,” explains Sony CEO Howard Stringer.

But the geijin head of Sony seems settling into the Japanese style of consenus management rather than the uglier Western version where Steve, Bill and Larry run roughshod over the organization in the hope to keep the elephant dancing.

In fact, this may be the first recording of a discussion where Sony pubicly admitted to aiming for a Number 2 position. So it's hard to tell whether this is good news (a less arrogant Sony) or bad news (still an unrealistic Sony).

When asked about taking advantage of the Sony Ericsson experience, Suzuki rationalises "...we have to have a unified strategy.” Hmmm, more company meetings while iPad sells another 7 million.

Sony has had tablets in development for some time (since May 2010 at least) and now plans to launch some this year. Maybe their relationship with Google Android might turn out a stunning product...

They would certainly need a Walkman-size hit to get even close to the second position in tablet sales mark by 2012.

And Sony, for decades the most feared brand for innovation in consumer electronics, still looks like its once-Elvis-size appeal has left the building. Maybe Sony's new slogan does sum it all up for vision and mindset: SONY. make.believe.

Go Sony Tells Press: We Want Number Two Spot

CEO Meyer Out at AMD

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The Man with The Axe Falls to a Bigger Axe

Abruptly, Dirk Meyer, the "engineer's engineer" and CEO of AMD has resigned...amid believable speculation that an unhappy AMD Board handed Meyer his resignation-- and asked to sign it.

Meyer, the CEO who wielded an unpopular job-cutting axe on AMD executives in Europe, fell to the bigger axe of the AMD Board.

DirkMeyer

Bruce Claflin, Executive Chairman of the AMD Board (an ex-Digital alumnus) admits: "Dirk became CEO during difficult times.  He successfully stabilized AMD while simultaneously concluding strategic initiatives including the launch of GLOBALFOUNDRIES, the successful settlement of our litigation with Intel and delivering Fusion APUs to the market..."

Ironically,  the project called "Fusion" was Meyer's last AMD accomplishment before his own "unpacking" at the chip maker.

Now, "the game has indeed changed" and Senior VP/CFO Thomas Seifert will become interim CEO. He has specifically asked (out of wisdom or modesty-- or the Board's insistence?) NOT to be considered for the permanant position.

Unlike HP, there is no casual fling, no suspect expense reports to point to in order to justify the Board's abrupt action. So why did Meyer get the Board's boot?

Claflin says, "The board believes we have the opportunity to create increased shareholder value over time ... This will require the company to have significant growth, establish market leadership, and generate superior financial returns. We believe a change in leadership at this time will accelerate the company's ability to accomplish these objectives."

What does that really mean?  Analyst Rob Enderle sums it up nicely: "Meyer was responsible for turning AMD around but didn't have the vision to position the company for the growth markets of tablets, smart TVs, and smartphones which are moving valuations.  He will be replaced with someone who can articulate that vision."

The best of Meyer's reputation at AMD did not extend to the commercial side where the market hits the street-level retailers and resellers. Besides taking an axe to an experienced sales force in Europe, Meyer suffered from "Microsoft-syndrome," that inability to see around the next tech corner.

Yes, Meyer despite success in servers tripped over the smaller form factors of smartphones and tablets.  If processors were the Wild West, Meyer would be hung from a tree by his Board with a sign around his neck saying, "He didn't understand mobile."

After all these years of frustration fighting Intel, the AMD Board is kicking itself as it watches ARM grow rapidly despite Intel...and watches Meyer, even up to his departure, telling press that smartphones is just "a different business."  After all AMD actually sold out its mobile business to Qualcomm in 2009. And got out of its digital television division when it sold to Broadcom in 2008.

Oh, gosh...do you think connected TV could ever be interesting?

Go AMD's Press Release
http://www.amd.com/us/press-releases/Pages/amd-appts-seifert-2011jan10.aspx

Go IBM and Samsung Sign Chip deal
http://www-03.ibm.com/press/us/en/pressrelease/33369.wss

 

A Phone to Power a PC?

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Motorola says its Motorola Atrix is the fastest smartphone around-- with a 1GHz dual-core processor and 1 GB memory, together with a qHD (960x540) touchscreen.

Motorola Atrix DockWhat makes the Android 2.2 set unique however are the 2 docks, which Motorola says turn the smartphone into either a mobile PC or a multimedia center.

Users can connect the phone to HDTV or standard monitor, keyboard and mouse with the HD multimedia dock. The Laptop dock meanwhile turns it into a fully fledged 11.6" laptop.

Through the Webtop app the docked phone produces a Linux-based windowed UI (with Mac OSX-style application dock) with a full version of Firefox, Flash 10.1 support, file manager and Citrix remote desktop support.

The app also maintains its state between sessions, meaning one can undock the phone any time and continue working on the phone itself.

The Entertainment Center feature meanwhile turns the phone into a media player when docked to any HDTV set, with 720p resolution playback. Users control the the interface through either the phone itself or Citrix remote.

Go Motorola Atrix

Best Buy Buys Back Purchased CE

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Best Buy kicks off a repurchasing program for old CE purchased from its stores.

Best Buy Customers are now able to buy "buy-back protection" with their Best Buy CE purchases, allowing them to sell back the items to the retailers later.

The program involves 5 categories--  laptops, netbooks, tablets, mobile phones and TVs.

Payments are in the form of a Best Buy gift card. A time-based sliding scale calculates the amount customers receive-- items 2 months old get up to 50% of original purchase price, while those by their maximum redemption point (2 years for tablets and mobile PCs, 4 years for TVs) get back up to 20%.

Best Buy mentions a study by Impulse Research showing concerns of technology becoming outdated prevents 40% of consumers from purchasing CE, or prevents them from doing so in the future.

Meanwhile from 30% of consumers planning to purchase a TV or laptop (in the next 12 months) 73% say they would purchase those products from retailers offering a repurchase program.

Go Buy Back Program from Best Buy Helps "Future-Proof" Today's CE Purchases

USB 3.0 for Kingston's 2011

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Kingston USB 3.0Kingston plans to develop a full range of USB 3.0 flash drive products this year, following its CES showings.

The company should release its fastest USB 3.0 device yet, the DataTraveler HyperX 3.0. It is part of Kingston's HyperXperience line of high-performance flash products.

The line will also include SSDs, USBs and cards complementing HyperX enthusiast memory modules.

A second generation of the DataTraveler Ultimate 3.0 (the companys's first USB 3.0 flash drive using a SATA bridge chip) will also be available in 16-, 32- and 64GB capacities.

Mainstream consumers will also be getting an entry-level flash drive going with USB 3.0 systems.

Go Kingston Announces 2011 USB 3.0 Product Roadmap

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