Apple slates laptop event next week
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Apple rumoured to tout new, cheaper laptops
By Gregg Keizer | Framingham | Friday, 10 October, 2008
Apple has issued invitations for an event next Tuesday, US time, on its California campus that will tout laptops.
"The spotlight turns to notebooks," the invitation sent to reporters read. The only other information Apple provided was its 10 a.m. PDT kickoff and driving directions to the building where the company will hold the event.
CEO Steve Jobs traditionally hosts such presentations.
Bloggers and others have been talking up an October 14 event for weeks, while analysts have been expecting Apple to refresh its laptop line for much longer. After Apple focused on its iPod business during a September 9 presentation in San Francisco, analysts predicted that the company would use a separate event to launch new notebooks or revamp existing models before the holiday selling season cranked up. Much of the speculation has focused on the prospect of a new design.
Rumours of lower-priced laptops from Apple picked up momentum when the new Inquisitr blog US$300 less than the current least-expensive MacBook notebook, which costs US$1,099.
"Apple's never had to go into a lower-priced mode," said Ezra Gottheil, an analyst with Technology Business Research. "They've never faced serious price pressure."
The worsening economic conditions, however, may have forced Apple's hand, added Gottheil. "I can see an Apple 'netbook,'" he said, referring to the smaller, lighter and lower-priced laptops that have begun to steal some market share from traditional-sized portables. "But I'd still expect [Apple's] to have a premium price."
If Inquisitr's US$800 price point is on the mark, Gottheil's price premium would indeed be in place; netbooks from other vendors that run Microsoft's Windows or one of the open-source Linux distributions cost hundreds of dollars less.
Gottheil also speculated that Apple might extend its multi-touch technology - which debuted on the MacBook Air last January - or perhaps add TV tuners to some of its laptops.
Wall Street analysts have been trying to parse Apple's intentions since July, when company executives used the phrase "future product transition" several times to explain why they were forecasting lower profit margins in the near future.
At the time, Gottheil pegged his bet on an overhaul of the laptop line as the only move that could hit Apple's bottom line like that. "For a refresh to affect the entire company's gross margin, the product must contribute a significant percentage of Apple's revenue," he said. "The single model with the greatest revenue is the MacBook, which we estimate generated US$1.3 billion in sales in [the second quarter]."
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