IBM: PCs going the way of typewriters

IBM: PCs going the way of typewriters

30 years after the first IBM PC, company executive says they're on the way out.

An executive that worked on the first IBM PC has claimed the format is heading the same way as the typewriter.

Speaking 30 years to the day after launching the first IBM PC, Mark Dean, chief technology officer at IBM for Middle East and Asia said IBM was right to leave the PC industry in 2005, when it sold out to Lenovo, and said the world was heading into a post-PC era.

“It’s amazing to me to think that 12 August marks the 30th anniversary of the IBM Personal Computer,” Dean said on IBM's Smarter Planet blog. “The announcement helped launch a phenomenon that changed the way we work, play and communicate. Little did we expect to create an industry that ultimately peaked at more than 300 million unit sales per year.”

But according to Dean, the arrival of tablets, smartphones and cloud computing means the writing is on the wall for the PC, although he admitted they would still hold strong in many industries – for now.

“I, personally, have moved beyond the PC as well - my primary computer now is a tablet,” Dean said. “When I helped design the PC, I didn’t think I’d live long enough to witness its decline.

"But, while PCs will continue to be much-used devices, they’re no longer at the leading edge of computing. They’re going the way of the vacuum tube, typewriter, vinyl records, CRT and incandescent light bulbs.”

Dean claimed that hardware and access devices were becoming less important as consumers focused more on how technology linked people, rather than on silicon itself.

“PCs are being replaced at the centre of computing not by another type of device, though there’s plenty of excitement about smartphones and tablets,” he said.

“These days, it’s becoming clear that innovation flourishes best not on devices, but in the social spaces between them, where people and ideas meet and interact. It is there that computing can have the most powerful impact on economy, society and people’s lives.”

This article originally appeared at pcpro.co.uk

Source: Copyright © PC Pro, Dennis Publishing

See more about:  ibm  |  exec  |  pcs  |  typewriters  |  pcbuilding
 
 

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Comments: 9
photohounds
15 August 2011
They've been saying this for quite a while - I think I first heard it in 2004. Upside? At least some IBM predictions come true :)


Comment made about the PC & Tech Authority article:
IBM: PCs going the way of typewriters?
30 years after the first IBM PC, company executive says they're on the way out.

What do you think? Join the discussion.
welshdog
15 August 2011
I think Mark Dean is wrong, though I question exactly what he understands by the term 'Personal Computer'. If he means 'desktop' then all I can say is for 'productivity' the PC has a lot of life left in it! There are a multitude of programs that require the sheer 'grunt' of a desktop vehicle in order to function adequately.

Even allowing for that, if we extend the PC metaphor to include what are now truly 'personal' computers then mobile devices such as PDA's, Smartphones, tablets, laptops and the like all still fit the bill! Each *is* quite clearly a PC... albeit in a smaller format than the giants of old.
ian_from_oz
15 August 2011
The stand-alone device on which you do you work is going the way of the do-do. The replacement is a terminal device connected into a network, where the work is processed and stored centrally, somewhat along the pattern of the mainframe.

The end devices no longer have to be DOS/Windows boxes as they are simply smart terminals We are seeing the rise of OSX, Android and Cloud-Computing pushing this model.

I for one will be happy to see the end of the end-device being a malware sponge.

Ian
Madaz
15 August 2011
^^ hence the term "the cloud"
c0nn0r
15 August 2011
Bill Gates:
"Spam will be solved by 2004"

This IBM guy is like Bill

monkie
15 August 2011
Mark Dean has been taking too many tablets.
r430r
15 August 2011
IBM once said "It's not the software that makes the most money, it's the hardware" ...I'm sure if you can convince bill gates to believe that, then I will gladly trade my PC for a laptop, and subdue the obvious advantage of a computer for a laptop that barely does half the job for nearly twice the price.
Slickpix
16 August 2011
Interesting comments but before we consign equipment to the bin, it would be nice to be able to correctly express oneself on said equipment. " An executive that worked on the first IBM PC ...". It should be "... executive who worked ...". Maybe a little more practice on the near obsolete machines?
pidasms
18 August 2011
Dont agree the desktop PC (ie a box connected to separate screens and keyboards) is on the way out. Certainly not for businesses-my desktop is actually under the desk out of the way, I have a 24" screen (try finding a laptop that big!), 2 DVD burners for copying disks, card reader, two fixed cables on desk to attach phone, camera, an eSATA portable 320GB hot swappable hard drive for backups and a 3 bin laser printer.There is no reason to use a laptop or other device amidst all this fixed hardware. I login and everything is connected and going, the thing is never turned off so maintenance and updates happen at night and dont bug me while I'm doing something!
My PC at home is actually more connected-in addition to its internal 2.5 TB of hard drives, external 2.5 TB USB drives there are a printer, an MFC, a webcam and HI FI amp and speakers attached, further cabling goes to another amp and speakers so I can stream audio eg internet radio into any room in house and garage, VGA out to TV in lounge. Couldnt possibly do all that with a laptop ( I have two) a smartphone or a tablet! Also with smartphone screens up to 4.3" and my netbook 10" screen see no place for tablets either!
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