In addition to the OEM licensing prices, DigiTimes also reported that a number of notebook manufacturers are placing high hopes on Windows 8 to reignite the demand for traditional notebooks but most of them are keeping a conservative attitude about the launch. One of the problems cited is the operating system’s requirement of a touchscreen to perform fully: which will increase the costs of the devices – at least until they become popular enough to cause a decrease in component prices – something that manufacturers have no control over.
We’ll just have to see how everything pans out when Windows 8 is released later this year in October.