High prices and low battery life are key concerns for companies trying to sell handheld PCs based on Microsoft's Ultra Mobile PC platform
Manufacturers are expressing concerns about Microsoft's Ultra Mobile PC platform
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Manufacturers admit to Ultra Mobile PC problems

High price and short battery life making Microsoft platform difficult to sell

Simon Burns at Computex in Taipei, vnunet.com 08 Jun 2006
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High prices and low battery life are key concerns for companies trying to sell handheld PCs based on Microsoft's Ultra Mobile PC (UMPC) platform, staff at one of those manufacturers told vnunet.com today. 

Taiwan-based PC and components makers Asustek and ECS, together with second-tier manufacturer AMtek, are among the companies showing UMPCs at the Computex trade show in Taipei. 

The UMPC, as specified by Microsoft, is a flat, handheld device midway in size between a smartphone or PDA and a notebook PC. It has a touch-sensitive screen, but no keyboard.

Other standard features include a version of Windows XP Tablet PC Edition, Bluetooth, an internal hard drive, and a wireless internet connection.

Criticism of early UMPCs has focused on high prices, poor battery life, and excessive weight and heat. The same criticisms have bedevilled past attempts at similar handheld PC concepts.

An AMtek representative, who did not wish to be named, conceded that manufacturers are concerned.

A major problem is that users are comparing UMPCs with what seems to them the most similar existing product, the notebook PC.

"The price is quite high if you compare it to a notebook," the representative admitted. Battery life, at two to two-and-a-half hours, is also unsatisfactory, he added.

AMtek's T700 UMPC should sell for around $800 to $900. The 850g product has a 1GHz VIA C7M low-voltage CPU, 512MB of memory, and a 800 x 480 pixel 7in LCD display.

AMtek manufactures the T700 in China and sells it to overseas distributors which re-brand it as their own product.

Although staff would not identify any of these overseas buyers, the T700 appears to be identical to TabletKiosk's EO which costs from $900 in the US. 

A relative unknown like AMTek might appear out of its depth facing much larger competitors like Samsung and Asustek in the UMPC market. 

However, staff said that AMtek's Singaporean parent firm is in fact one of the world's largest manufacturers of notebook PC chassis, with approximately 25 per cent of the market. 

The company therefore has the background and manufacturing know-how to succeed despite the competition, according to the company.

See also:

Pace Blade Origami takes on Samsung Q1  26 May 2006
Ultra-mobile PC could compete in PDA as well as notebook market  25 May 2006
The first Microsoft Origami tablet PC will go on sale for $1,099 next Monday in the USHandheld Windows device debuts online next week  02 May 2006
The market for Ultra Mobile PCs could reach 7.8 million units by 2011High speed networking option critical for UMPC success  28 Apr 2006
The demonstration gremlin strikes again  17 Apr 2006
Why March was the most exciting month for computing since the birth of the web  20 Apr 2006
Intel and Microsoft have been showing off UMPC devices over the past 12 monthsSmall device has big challenges ahead  10 Mar 2006
With prices starting at $700, these devices could change the world  10 Mar 2006
Samsung tablet to use Microsoft's new interface  09 Mar 2006
First official outing at CeBIT  09 Mar 2006
Origami is likely to be a cut down version of Windows XP or CEDetails unfold slowly  03 Mar 2006
Microsoft's Origami is likely to be an expanded PDA with mobile phone technology built inHard product or paper tiger?  01 Mar 2006

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