Rob Enderle

About

Rob Enderle is a principal at Enderle Group. He is a nationally recognized analyst and a longtime writer for eWEEK and Pund-IT. Enderle is considered one of the top 10 IT analysts in the world by Apollo Research, which evaluated 3,960 technology analysts and their individual press coverage metrics.

The Mobile World of CES

It wouldnt take a degree in logic to deduce that last weeks Consumer Electronics Show focused primarily on consumer technology. But despite the shows moniker, some of the products announced at CES hold promise the corporate market; you just have to look a little harder and (in some cases) exert a little imagination. For me, […]

New Components Mobilize for CES and Macworld Expo

Mobile technologys new year started off with a bang: Based on technologies on display at this weeks Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas and Macworld Expo San Francisco, Intel, AMD, Via, Hitachi and Toshiba have collectively ensured that 2004 will bear smaller, faster, less-expensive laptop and handheld computers. Lets start with Apple Computers main course […]

15-Inch Notebooks to Storm the Market in 2004

With a nearly vertical trajectory, demand for desktop LCD monitors and TVs has pushed production to radical levels; the economies of scale have resulted in incredibly low cost LCD panels. The most aggressive form factor as we move into 2004 is the 15.4-inch panoramic display, which lets users put more work onto their screens. Laptop […]

Best (and Worst) of the 2003 Desktop and Mobile PC Market

The years dramatic turns in the global economy and geopolitics were echoed in the PC industry. Here are some of the good and bad events that crossed that smaller stage. The Good Intel makes waves: After being slapped upside the head by Transmeta Corp. a few years ago, Intel Corp. came back with a bang […]

Hitachi, Toshiba Ready Fuel-Cell Attack

At Decembers Eco-Products 2003 show, Hitachi announced its entry into the race to obsolete the battery. The company is now one of two major mobile technology vendors racing to ensure the battery is obsolete as a power source for portable computers long before this decade is over. Battery technology has languished in the face of […]

MPC Delivers—Quietly

As individual customers, we often focus our attention on high-profile companies, the ones with the flashiest designs or coolest offerings. For large organizations, however, other considerations may outshine the flash of a marketing campaign or a high-profile halo product. MPC Computers, formerly Micron Computers, has been quietly executing in the background through the market downturn—and […]

BlackBerry Handheld Gives Way to BlackBerry Service

PalmOnes and Microsofts handheld computers have had their ups and downs in competition with Research in Motion Ltd.: While their devices comfortably lead RIMs for multimedia and third-party applications, they trail substantially on messaging. Unfortunately for Palm and Microsoft, while most users can live without MP3 players, video games and pretty pictures, many of us […]

Handheld Market Leaders: Whos on First?

Now that Research in Motion Ltd. has announced that it will support Wi-Fi on a new generation of handheld computers, its time we compare each of the companies that define this category. PalmOne and RIM compete for the best-connected device today. Palm, with the Handspring 600, arguably has a better phone; the RIM BlackBerry remains […]

HPs Two-Tone Retail Stylings

Recent reports from financial analysts and feedback from large enterprises agree: Dell and Hewlett-Packard currently top the heap in mobile sales, despite their very different routes to that position. Outside the enterprise, Dell and HP have pursued distinct sales channels. Dell mostly sells direct (notwithstanding some localized efforts, such as mall kiosks and placement in […]

Sharps Zaurus: Linux Enters Handheld Platform Wars

For those who thought Linux had no chance in mobile devices, Sharp clearly begs to differ. With its latest Zaurus handheld, the SL-C860, Sharp could have a product with legs. Sharp, along with Casio, owned the PDA space a few years back, but it virtually vanished as a player once Palm and Microsoft entered. Then […]