Thursday, October 11th 2012
Disappointing Ultrabook Shipments Won't Derail SSD Market in 2012
Although the near-term prospects for ultrabooks have dimmed significantly, the solid state drives (SSDs) employed by these next-generation notebooks and other products are so diversified in their uses and so compelling in their value proposition that their growth outlook has decreased only slightly.
SSD shipments in the first half of this year amounted to 12.9 million units, according to the IHS iSuppli Memory & Storage Service at information and analytics provider IHS. Shipments reached 10.5 million in the third quarter and will rise to 17.5 million units in the fourth, amounting to a total of 28.0 million units in the second half-more than double the total shipped during the first six months of the year, as shown in the figure below. This is down from the previous forecast of 13.0 million in the third quarter and 20.0 million in the fourth.The shipment numbers cover pure standalone SSDs-i.e., units with no hard disk drives (HDDs) associated with them-as well as when the drives are used with HDDs as separate cache SSD entities. These numbers cover all applications for SSDs, including the enterprise segment, ultrabooks and other so-called ultrathin computers.
"Intel Corp. has not matched its ambitious goals for ultrabooks with the marketing needed to propel the platforms as a desirable, affordable alternative to conventional notebooks and tablets," said Ryan Chien, analyst for memory and storage at IHS. "This has prompted IHS to lower its cache SSD shipment projection. However, pricing for SSDs has fallen well below the $1-per-gigabyte threshold, making their value proposition more attractive than ever. Because of this, SSDs are finding uses in other products, helping to compensate for the shortfall in ultrabooks."
Aggressive Long-term Outlook
IHS is maintaining an aggressive long-term outlook for SSDs due to NAND die shrinks, increasing utilization of TLC flash, and controllers with more advanced flash management techniques that are accelerating the cost curve.
The second quarter of the year closed with 7.1 million SSDs being shipped for $1.5 billion in revenue.
And although cache SSDs undershot expectations, traditional SSDs-including those for the enterprise market-with their higher prices helped make up the revenue slack. By the second half of this decade, SSDs will be a de facto standard in non-budget notebook and desktop PCs, thanks to a mixture of lower prices, consumer education and an optimized software ecosystem.
IHS projects the SSD industry will finish 2012 with $7.5 billion in revenue and 41.0 million in shipments, with compound annual growth rates of 35 percent and 69 percent, respectively.
SSD shipments in the first half of this year amounted to 12.9 million units, according to the IHS iSuppli Memory & Storage Service at information and analytics provider IHS. Shipments reached 10.5 million in the third quarter and will rise to 17.5 million units in the fourth, amounting to a total of 28.0 million units in the second half-more than double the total shipped during the first six months of the year, as shown in the figure below. This is down from the previous forecast of 13.0 million in the third quarter and 20.0 million in the fourth.The shipment numbers cover pure standalone SSDs-i.e., units with no hard disk drives (HDDs) associated with them-as well as when the drives are used with HDDs as separate cache SSD entities. These numbers cover all applications for SSDs, including the enterprise segment, ultrabooks and other so-called ultrathin computers.
"Intel Corp. has not matched its ambitious goals for ultrabooks with the marketing needed to propel the platforms as a desirable, affordable alternative to conventional notebooks and tablets," said Ryan Chien, analyst for memory and storage at IHS. "This has prompted IHS to lower its cache SSD shipment projection. However, pricing for SSDs has fallen well below the $1-per-gigabyte threshold, making their value proposition more attractive than ever. Because of this, SSDs are finding uses in other products, helping to compensate for the shortfall in ultrabooks."
Aggressive Long-term Outlook
IHS is maintaining an aggressive long-term outlook for SSDs due to NAND die shrinks, increasing utilization of TLC flash, and controllers with more advanced flash management techniques that are accelerating the cost curve.
The second quarter of the year closed with 7.1 million SSDs being shipped for $1.5 billion in revenue.
And although cache SSDs undershot expectations, traditional SSDs-including those for the enterprise market-with their higher prices helped make up the revenue slack. By the second half of this decade, SSDs will be a de facto standard in non-budget notebook and desktop PCs, thanks to a mixture of lower prices, consumer education and an optimized software ecosystem.
IHS projects the SSD industry will finish 2012 with $7.5 billion in revenue and 41.0 million in shipments, with compound annual growth rates of 35 percent and 69 percent, respectively.
21 Comments on Disappointing Ultrabook Shipments Won't Derail SSD Market in 2012
My impression of ultrabooks is almost the same as Macbook air. If you feel you need it you probably have a job talking and writing a lot of e-mails without numbers in them, so more of a "feel-good" job, and more about "feelings" than sales or actual work. In short your probably are HR, PR or some other spin artist that I despise.
light weight, high CPU powered laptops with extra battery life.
cheap.
pick one.
Wait till you have a need for it, and I would like to see you eat your words.
I can't carry a laptop that weighs 1 more pound cause I'm a hipster weakling?
I can't fit a laptop in any normal laptop bag due to all my extra sweaters and earmuffs, two pairs of oversized headphones to get attention, glasses cases. That extra half inch of thickness is TOO much.
I can't fit my laptop in my carry on as I can't afford a bag once I buy this ultrabook, so I am only going to be able to take the ultrabook and no accessories, and it has no disk drive, so I will be forced to play minesweeper on the plane.
I can't be seen with anything but a ultrabook, it lets the opposite sex that I am trying to attract know that I am the materialistic asshole self-centered ego manic co-dependent they need.
Pick one.
You are allowed a carry on item, and one personal item like a laptop bag that will fit under the seat in front of you, mine does, and I know larger bags do. My phone fits in my pocket, and my big headphones are on already.
I call bullshit. Unless you plan on being on a plane at least once a month or more, and have flights that last longer than 8 hours each, and your only job is to send e-mails or watch movies on a ultrabook it is a waste. My phone will do 80% of what a ultrabook does and better.
Basically ultrabooks only pay themselves off when you carry them everyday on top of other things. Very common (and amusing) to see people lugging their massive gaming laptops to uni's library, piss everyone off with the fans, and then within a month after uni starting you will almost never see any laptops other than small ones in library anymore. I call that relevant data, not sure if you accept them.