The Sunday Guardian

Aiming to capture 10% laptop share in India in 2019: ASUS

- IANS

NEW DELHI: With PC and laptop gaming gaining momentum in India, Taiwanese electronic­s major ASUS aims to garner 10% market share next year with launching innovative products in the thin and light segment, a top company executive said on Saturday.

“In 2019, we are targeting that we should reach around 4 lakh units (laptops) with 10% market share. You will see gaming and consumer laptops in the thin and light segment from us at an affordable price range next year,” Arnold Su, PC and Gaming Head ASUS India, told IANS in an interview. According to the company, ASUS would end up at around 2.6 lakh units, with around 7-8% market share, in the Indian market. “We are sure that with the new strategy, our business will capture even greater market share next year,” Su added.

With gaming picking up as a profession in India, the executive said the country has great potential ahead.

“Republic of Gamers (ROG) is the most searched gaming brand in India and in terms of our gaming market share, we are currently at 20-22% and aim to reach 30% next year,” Su said. The PC market has become stagnant but the gaming market is growing aggressive­ly and ASUS is among the fastest growing brand in the laptop segment.

“We started the year with 4.9% market share but in the third quarter (Q3), we reached 9.4%. So our growth has been close to almost 90%,” Su told IANS. The company has recently launched two gaming laptops in India that feature AMD Ryzen 5 processor with up to 8GB DDR4 memory and AMD Radeon Vega 8 graphics. “The reason for entering into such a partnershi­p with AMD is because of the growing demand among gamers for better and advanced so- lutions. The RYZEN series provides just that for our end users,” Su said while elaboratin­g about the company’s collaborat­ion with the US-based chip maker.

“We are confident of the positive contributi­on AMD would make to our growth story,” the executive added.

The company currently is not into making software as it is working closely with game developers to focus more on the hardware front.

“We are not ready to jump to the software, whatever the design we have in our laptops, we ensure that our laptops are compatible with different games. This is our goal,” said the executive.

“For us, we will not be able to design the games right now. We need to ensure that our hardware is compatible and perfect to meet the requiremen­ts of different games. So, we are working with them (game developers) very closely,” Su informed. Minnesota prosecutor­s will not charge the billionair­e chief executive officer of China’s JD.com Inc, Richard Liu, after he was accused of rape by a University of Minnesota student during a recent US visit, authoritie­s said on Friday.

Hennepin County Attorney Michael Freeman said there were “profound evidentiar­y problems which would have made it highly unlikely that any criminal charge could be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.”

In a statement, Freeman said that after an investigat­ion by Minneapoli­s police and a review by four senior sexual assault prosecutor­s, it was clear his office could not meet its burden of proof, and therefore could not bring charges.

“Because we do not want

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