Apple's Tim Cook has said as much according the this link:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technology/apple/11984806/Apples-Tim-Cook-declares-the-end-...l-product.html
So, are the reports of the PC's death greatly exaggerated? People said the PC would kill the mainframe too, not so. It is hard getting a good sense of whether there is any weight to Cook's remarks. My efforts to read a journalists' takes on the topic have been fruitless. So here is my take. Full disclosure: I am a PC guy, so my thoughts aren't some biased rant against PCs. In fact quite the opposite, more like a sad farewell to an old friend.
First, what exactly does Tim Cook mean by the PC? My guess is he is talking about the desktop form factor most typically found perched on top or below someone's desk with an attached monitor and keyboard/mouse. I think it is a fair question to ask, "What purpose does such a form factor serve in the consumer space?" To use the thing, you gotta go to it. You can't take it with you to the couch, bed, loo, coffeeshop, etc. Contrast that with your favorite mobile device and desktops look uber-inconvenient.
But, you say, I can't be as productive with my favorite mobile device. The screen is too small, the keyboard is cramped, the thing is slow. If I need to get real work done like encoding a video, I use my desktop. Look, you are preaching to the choir here. I get it. Mobile devices are great for lightweight tasks like watching streaming video, surfing the web, checking email. For serious work, the desktop is the only realistic option. Or is it?
And here is where my thoughts differ markedly from the talking heads.
The single, biggest signal that the desktop market is dying is that the mobile space is starting to overtake the desktop space. What do I mean? Two examples.
First, pcie ssd's. When ssd's first came out, they used the same SATA interface that regular hard drives used. It didn't take long for ssd manufacturers to saturate the SATA bus and it looked for a time that SATA Express would be the next generation protocol for even faster ssd speeds. But that was so 2013. Fast forward to October 2015, Samsung unveils an ssd that uses the pcie interface and SATA Express is dead. Why is this relevant? Well, the pcie ssd actually was borrowed from the mobile space. The first pcie ssd appeared in ultrabooks more than two years ago. Many new, desktop motherboards sport the M.2 connector which makes no sense on a desktop because it lays flat or flush with the PCB versus perpendicular like a pcie card. Also, don't think for a second that you can just grab one of these beasts and pop it into a spare pcie slot. Unless you have the latest chipsets, you won't be able to boot from the device. Bottomline, the pcie ssd is a mobile technology. Watching it find its way into the desktop space over the last two years is like watching paint dry. Very frustrating for those of us used to cutting edge technology driving the desktop space.
Second, Intel has been forced to devote more R&D to mobile in order to compete head-on with ARM. The results of this strategy are most poignantly felt in the Broadwell CPU series. Released over a year ago, the first SKUs were the low-power, low performance Core M chips designed specifically for mobile devices. The arms race for faster clocks and more cores is over. The war is now about reducing power consumption to save battery life. Something the desktop user hardly needs to worry about. In fact, it looked for a time that Intel might skip over desktop sku's for Broadwell and make Skylake the desktop refresh.
What does all this mean? First, the demand for computing has swung from desktops to mobile devices. Second, the capital for R&D has flowed there as well. As a result, the market for desktops has shrunk both from a demand perspective and from a R&D capital perspective. I am not a prophet, but I think it is highly possible that Skylake could be the last desktop refresh for a long time.
In the mean time, tablets, phones, laptops will get more and more powerful and soon the desktop will look like an antiquated device unable to keep up.
So long my desktop friend. You will be missed.