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Microsofts New Tablet

Lewis

Member
Microsoft's tablet needs to dazzle

They say that this Tablet can stand up to the iPad and not lose a step.


Microsoft's long-promised tablet is finally (almost) here.
The company scheduled a last-minute, mysterious event to be held at 3:30 p.m. Pacific Time on Monday in Los Angeles. Microsoft didn't give attendees much notice -- invitations went out Thursday.
The rumor mill has been churning ever since, and the conventional wisdom is that Microsoft will be unveiling its first Windows 8 tablet. Here's the twist: Microsoft (MSFT, Fortune 500) is manufacturing the tablet itself, according to reports in The Wrap and other outlets.
That would be a drastic shift from Microsoft's historic strategy of relying on hardware partners like Dell (DELL, Fortune 500) and HP (HPQ, Fortune 500) to make its actual devices.


If the company does unveil its own Microsoft-branded tablet, there are two ways it can go.
Option A: This is it; here's our iPad killer. Go buy it.
The more likely Option B: Here's a partner-built, Microsoft-branded model of what we'd like Windows tablets to look like. Now go build your own, other hardware folks.
That's the approach Google takes with its Nexus line of Android phones. The company works with outside hardware partners each year to develop a "model" phone showing off all of Android's latest bells-and-whistles. The device is available to consumers, but it's also intended as a guide for other Android smartphone makers.


In either case, Microsoft needs to work quickly.
Two years ago, Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer promised "urgency" on tablets, calling them Microsoft's "job one." Since then, Apple (AAPL, Fortune 500) has launched three iPads and secured a 59% share of the market. Google (GOOG, Fortune 500) tablets haven't reached iPad levels, but the company's free Android software helped it make inroads.
Option A: If Microsoft goes the "here it is" route, it will be ripping a page from Apple's playbook and taking "If you want something done right, do it yourself" approach.


But Microsoft's hardware track record is mixed. The social-media themed Kin phone was killed off mere weeks after it launched in 2010. Would-be iPod rival Zune was essentially dead on arrival in 2006 (the brand was officially "phased out" a few weeks ago).
Here's the bright spot: the Xbox gaming console, launched in 2001, is one of Microsoft's brightest successes. The Kinect motion-detection add-on, released in 2010, became one of the fastest-selling consumer gadgets in history.


In this case, though, Microsoft doesn't have much room for trial and error. Its efforts to take on Apple and Google in the phone market have been grim: Its Windows Phone partner, Nokia (NOK), recently slashed its sales forecasts and announced plans to lay off 10,000 workers.
Option B: The tablet market is littered with corpses, and Microsoft can't afford a disaster. The safer option is to stick to its time-tested strategy of focusing on software and outsourcing the actual device design to its hardware partners.


Acer and Asus have already previewed devices featuring "Windows RT," the tablet-optimized version of Microsoft's Windows 8 operating system. Dell is also strongly rumored to have one in the works. Samsung is highly likely to be on the list too.
CNN
 
I had an ipad at my last job, and I loved it, but I wouldn't buy one myself. To me, the iPad just screams "luxury". It's not as functional as a laptop, and it isn't upgradable. Now that there are less costly alternatives out there, making the choice is the hardest part for me.

I hear Apple is coming out with a smaller version of the iPad this fall supposedly priced around $200. I'm interested, but I don't know that I particularly like those devices that are sized in between a phone and a tablet. The perfect scenario for me would be if Apple would stop over-pricing the iPad. In that case, I'm in!
 
The new MS tablet looks really good. It has a fold out tab on it's back to stand it upright on a flat surface, like a picture frame.

Why, you ask? :lol

It's cover folds down and has a built-in keyboard.

It will run Windows 8, so obviously people like myself and Tim have to to ask:

Will it also run Linux? :toofunny
 
.......

It will run Windows 8, so obviously people like myself and Tim have to to ask:

Will it also run Linux? :toofunny

Even a better question to ask, will it get viruses? That will blow to smithereens the self-assured statement that "Microsoft gets more viruses because more people use Microsoft" nonsense. No dear. Microsoft primarily has the PC market whereas the device market is dominated by Apple, Android and similar. Obviously they have the lion's share right now. But what gets viruses? All of them? No only Microsoft PC's. Then if and when Microsoft enters this new field and they start falling like flies with the malware, then we know it's the OS and not "because more people use it" because in this case Apple et al came first and more people right now use Apple, Android, and similar based OS's.

And one other thing. If Microsoft can keep the viruses out of their devices, then it goes to show they can do it and begs the question why they aren't trying hard enough on the desktop computer?
 
I own an android tablet, it is mostly used for watching movies when I travel for work. If I had it to do over, I would have saved the money and did something productive with it. Although the Logos software is quite nice. :)

Sent from my ADR6425LVW using Tapatalk 2
 
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