Chromebooks Are Problematic For Profits And Planet, Says Lenovo Exec
CANALYS APAC FORUMS Lenovo won't stop making Chromebooks despite the machines scoring poorly when it comes to both sustainability and revenue, according to an exec speaking at Canalys APAC Forum in Bangkok on Wednesday.
"I don't know who makes the profit," commented Che Min Tu, Lenovo senior vice president and group operations officer. "Everybody struggled to sell the Chromebook."
Tu further remarked that the laptop is not great from an environmental standpoint either – recycling its material won't be easy, or cheap.
"But I think we'll continue to sell the Chromebook because there's a demand," explained Tu, who added that the major driver of that demand is coming from the education sector.
While the number of Chromebooks being sold has dropped since the pandemic, the education market has kept it afloat. In the US, education accounted for 80 percent of Chromebook sales in Q2 this year.
- Why Chromebooks are the new immortals of tech
- Alibaba takes more of Salesforce behind the great firewall
- A cheap Chinese PC with odd components. What could go wrong?
- Google promises eternity of updates for Chromebooks – that's a decade for everyone else
IDC estimated that Q2 Chromebook channel sales shrank 1.8 percent to 5.8 million units in that quarter as many customers had refreshed in the previous quarter to avoid a licensing increase in the second half of 2023.
Tu said Lenovo was benefitting from its "China plus one" supply chain policy and was continuing to enhance its local manufacturing capability in India.
Lenovo's sub-continental expansion could have easily gone wrong had India not paused a requirement that banned PC and server vendors who do not secure an import license.
The policy was intended to boost homemade tech and its "Made In India" campaign, but instead generated a backlash from manufacturers.
The Indian government issued Lenovo, and around 110 other firms, licenses around the start of November.
"I think they delayed because they realized there are a lot of local elements needed in order to enable the local manufacturers to see what's going on right now in terms of assembly. You need to bring an entire ecosystem. Lenovo's secret is in its supply chain," commented the veep.
At Canalys EMEA Forum 2023 this October, another Lenovo vice president pledged the world would see AI PCs in the second half of next year and early 2025.
According to Tu, the first Arm AI PCs will appear from mid next year, although AI PCs in general are still years away while the enabling ecosystem around them grows.
Although the definition of an AI PC remains in flux, the veep explained that Lenovo's vision is that "AI is able to bring a digital twin to support you in your daily life," meaning "certain process capability is required."
Lenovo's vision of a PC digital twin does not eliminate the need for a smartphone, according to the exec. He predicted the phone and its innovations, including foldable devices, will become "very, very important – especially in the AI PC era." ®
From Chip War To Cloud War: The Next Frontier In Global Tech Competition
The global chip war, characterized by intense competition among nations and corporations for supremacy in semiconductor ... Read more
The High Stakes Of Tech Regulation: Security Risks And Market Dynamics
The influence of tech giants in the global economy continues to grow, raising crucial questions about how to balance sec... Read more
The Tyranny Of Instagram Interiors: Why It's Time To Break Free From Algorithm-Driven Aesthetics
Instagram has become a dominant force in shaping interior design trends, offering a seemingly endless stream of inspirat... Read more
The Data Crunch In AI: Strategies For Sustainability
Exploring solutions to the imminent exhaustion of internet data for AI training.As the artificial intelligence (AI) indu... Read more
Google Abandons Four-Year Effort To Remove Cookies From Chrome Browser
After four years of dedicated effort, Google has decided to abandon its plan to remove third-party cookies from its Chro... Read more
LinkedIn Embraces AI And Gamification To Drive User Engagement And Revenue
In an effort to tackle slowing revenue growth and enhance user engagement, LinkedIn is turning to artificial intelligenc... Read more