Intel is counting on ultrabooks - ultra-thin notebook PCs similar to Apple Inc's AAPL.O Macbook Air and offering some of the technological chic of tablets - to revive a PC market languishing due to the growing popularity of the iPad.ĭespite a higher retail price, Intel expects the touch ultrabook will be well received by the market and it will enter agreements with four Taiwanese touch panel makers on Tuesday to enable the expansion of the current capacity for touch-enabled ultrabook convertible designs by 3-5 times. The world’s biggest chipmaker remains confident about consumer spending on innovative devices, despite the economic headwinds buffeting much of the developed world. A woman takes a photo of ultrabooks at the Intel booth during the 2012 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, Nevada January 10, 2012.
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