back to article Tablet-types drive demand for all-in-one desktop PCs

More than a third of desktop computer sales in Britain are all-in-one machines, up from a quarter during the first half of the year. So says local market-watcher GfK, which noted a sudden jump in over-the-counter sales of AIOs in August and September. AIOs grew by 27.4 per cent in sales value, driven by a 6.5 per cent …

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  1. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Metr no

    Is this surprising given the touch capabilities of Windows 8 and the fact that the leading high street box shifter still does not stock off the shelf touchscreen monitors citing the cost so the only way to use a touch interface is to buy a new AiO?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Metr no

      It doesn't say if the growth is in Apple or Wintel devices, nor that they are touch screen AIOs, so can't really conclude anything about metro.

      As devices spread throughout the home, the appeal of not having wires for LAN, mouse, keyboard, video, speakers, power leads for monitor, and base unit make them far more acceptable to the overseer of gadgets in the home, in my case its the WAF, but YMMV. Whilst you can reduce a traditional PC somewhat with wireless mouse and keyboard and Wifi, you can't get beat the AIO footprint.

      What is frustrating is that the dreadful sound of large flat screen TVs pretty much mandates the purchase of a soundbar, if not a full AV 5.1 system, which then adds to the cabling :-(

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