Samsung re-enters U.S. notebook computer market
Diversified electronics maker Samsung Electronics Co Ltd said it is re-entering the U.S. computer market with a range of branded products that build on its component supply strengths.
The Korean-based company will introduce on Tuesday new ultralight notebooks designed to appeal to potential buyers of Apple Inc’s ground-breaking MacBook Air and smaller “netbook” models from the likes of Asustek Computer.
Breaking into the crowded U.S. market involves taking share from more established players. The Korean electronics maker sees other Asian brand-name players as vulnerable, especially Toshiba Corp, Sony Corp and Lenovo.
Samsung is also coming out with models aimed at business professionals and the market for bulkier laptops known as “desktop replacements,” a Samsung executive said.
Like Apple’s Air, Samsung’s X-Series premium lightweight notebooks come with options for either a hard drive or solid state memory no teletrek payday advance. But Samsung’s X360 is priced at $2,499 and carries 128 gigabytes of flash memory, twice the 64 gigabytes that comes with the Apple Air selling for $2,598.
“These products really go after Apple and Sony. This is the MacBook Air killer,” Bret Berg, the senior product manager for Samsung’s U.S. computer division, said in an interview.
The X360 weighs 2.8 pounds and has an ultra-thin, tapered wedge design with a magnesium allow chassis, an aluminum top and a “pebble”-style keyboard.
Samsung’s hard-drive version, the X460, starts at $1,899 for a 160-gigabyte hard drive, twice the capacity of Apple’s existing MacBook Air model that is priced at $1,799 for an 80-gigabyte drive. The X460 weighs just under 4.2 pounds.