New industry study

Published: 10 September 1999 y., Friday
The popularity of flat-panel desktop monitors continues to increase, with quarterly sales surpassing $1 billion for the first time ever, according to a new industry study. DisplaySearch, in Austin, Texas, on Wednesday reported sales of LCD desktop monitors reached $1.8 billion in the second quarter, a 20 percent quarter-to-quarter increase. A global flat-panel shortage accounted for some of the increase, but DisplaySearch said unit shipments also grew 8 percent over the first quarter and five-fold over the year-ago quarter. Japan was the largest market for flat-panel desktop monitors, although its global share declined to 61 percent from 74 percent in the first quarter. At the same time, Europe increased its consumption of desktop displays to 31 percent of the market, up from 23 percent. DisplaySearch said LCDs increased their penetration of the desktop market to account for 11.4 percent of all desktop monitor shipments, up from 3.9 percent in the previous quarter. The survey said NEC once again was the industry_s largest FPD desktop monitor supplier, followed by Fujitsu and Mitsubishi.
Šaltinis: Electronic Buyers_ News
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

IBM makes e-commerce software push

IBM will start selling its Web software with enhancements to let companies conduct fully automated electronic commerce on the Internet without people clicking on browsers. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Singapore: 99% Of Businesses Have Net Connections

A massive 98.7 percent of Singapore companies have Internet connections, and business-to-business (B2B) e-commerce is expected to be worth 109 billion Singapore dollars more »

Poland develops NATO e-mail safety codes

Specialists from the State Protection Office (UOP) have developed an e-mail safety code scheme for use in NATO countries' national security systems more »

Microsoft changes licensing

Move may make software pricier for many firms more »

The latest harmful code

The "Homepage" Internet-Worm Does Not Pose a Threat to Kaspersky Anti-Virus Users more »

CRM By Subscription

Bank of America signs with ASP but can license software later more »

Palm Slips, Pocket PC Gains In Europe

Sales of Pocket PCs, and particularly Compaq's iPAQ handheld, surged in Western Europe in the first quarter of 2001 while Psion handhelds lost ground and Palm had mixed results more »

Speak, Aibo, speak

Sony's robot dog is learning some new tricks and, as a true high-tech pet, will be able to fetch e-mail. more »

Microsoft to ship Windows XP in October

MICROSOFT will announce this week that Windows XP is slated to ship in late October more »