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> TECHNOLOGY > STORAGE
Personal storage
market continues to hold more opportunity
ConvergenceAsia staff
21/02/2008
According to research firm
IDC's recent report entitled Asia Pacific (Excluding Japan) Home Storage
Survey 2007, the proliferation of digital content is creating more
opportunities for personal storage devices in various countries in the Asia
Pacific region.
Respondents to a recent user survey indicated that they preferred to backup
their digital content onto a CD or by copying data to an external HDD
attached to the computer. Using a DVD burner to backup data turned out to be
the third most popular choice, while a much smaller percentage of
respondents used an online storage service or copy data to an external HDD
attached to the home network.
Claudio Checchia, research manager of IDC’s Asia Pacific Consumer Markets
comments, "In addition to a growing number of Internet users with a
residential broadband connection, penetration of consumer electronics (CE)
devices, such as portable MP3 players, gaming consoles, digital cameras, and
camcorders continues to grow rapidly.”
“On one hand, the explosion in the amount of digital content consumers
handle is expected to generate solid demand for recordable optical drives
and hard disk drives (HDDs) used in PCs and other personal storage devices.
On the other hand, it also raises new issues concerning the storage, backing
up, and sharing of large digital multimedia files.”
IDC’s Skypad Project 2007 sets out to understand how much digital
content — defined as both personal and downloaded from the Internet —
respondents have stored in the home PCs. Survey results show that over 50
per cent of the respondents stored less than 100 gigabytes (GB) of digital
content, with the highest incidence encountered among respondents in the PRC,
followed by India, Korea, Malaysia, and Hong Kong.
Just less than one-quarter of all respondents stored over 100 GB of digital
content, with Taiwan showing the highest percentage of respondents storing
over 100 GB, followed by Thailand, Hong Kong, and India. At the high end of
the spectrum, respondents who saved over 1 terabytes (TB) of digital content
amounted to less than 2 per cent, with higher penetration rates observed in
Thailand, Taiwan, and Hong Kong.
Looking at the most valuable types of digital content respondents tended to
backup, survey data shows that there were some differences for each backup
method. However, in general it emerges that personal photos and personal
documents were by far the most valuable digital files that majority of
respondents tended to backup, followed by audio files and other types of
digital images.
IDC expects that the personal storage market will continue to hold more
opportunity as survey data shows the majority of respondents believed their
digital library would enjoy moderate to aggressive expansion above the
current level within the next twelve months. In particular, a higher
percentage of respondents in Thailand, India, the PRC, Korea, Thailand, and
Taiwan believed that their multimedia content would enjoy moderate to strong
growth above the current level within the next year.
This report breaks down responses by country within the Asia Pacific region,
and includes detailed splits on device preferences (for instance, external
HDD vs optical drives), differences between networked vs non-networked
homes, and correlations with income levels. |
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