US personal computer sales are up 17% over 1986 levels so far this year, according to McGraw-Hill’s Future Computing unit, but it reckons that the market is close to maturity, and that double-digit growth rates will disappear by the end of the decade, by which time the business will be primarily replacement rather than virgin […]
US personal computer sales are up 17% over 1986 levels so far this year, according to McGraw-Hill’s Future Computing unit, but it reckons that the market is close to maturity, and that double-digit growth rates will disappear by the end of the decade, by which time the business will be primarily replacement rather than virgin sales.