To me, the bigger potential is from the OS and not the hardware itself.
As more manufacturers move to foldable devices, I see them licensing MSFT's android skin instead of going through the arduous process of developing one anew.
It might be what lets microsoft finally get a foothold in the smartphone market, after many failed attempts.
I think BossingAround means that any mobile OS other the iOS or Android has been a failure. The Surface & Surface Pro run a desktop OS: Windows 10. Microsoft tried with various mobile OS attempts and seems to have given up. Which is a shame, since the tile interface was actually pretty good.
"Tried" is maybe the wrong word. Windows CE was a leading OS on smart handheld devices for a good long while.
Arguably, the biggest single thing that killed their market position (aside from the launches of iOS and Android, of course) was that they didn't retain backward compatibility, so Windows Phone 7 and later were effectively a completely different OS. Getting into competition with yourself is rarely a winning strategy.
When Microsoft released Windows Phone 7, it really got people excited. It was a shot across Skeuomorph UI's bow. Big fonts, dark mode by default, flat and chromeless to an almost fault. It was a serious departure from the Windows Mobile days. People were (more) comfortable with it not being backward compatible. Plus WM had turned into a mess of scaling problems, 3rd party skins, over the top launchers, and apps that weren't necessary cross device compatible.
But then they did it again, Windows Phone 8 was not coming to any Windows Phone 7 devices. Even though MS originally said it would. Instead, all the WP7 phones got some 7.x feature update. Everyone showing off their shining new Nokias were burned during the honeymoon and that cooled interest. Especially when compared to Apple's sterling record.
And then, they did it again, sorta. Many of the Windows phone 8 devices were not going to get updates to Windows 10 Mobile. Worse yet, Microsoft walked the striking UI way back. Except for the launcher, things starter looking rather conventional.
There was no coming back from that. 41MP and real OIS, Zeiss optics and xenon flash. Things that were basically unheard of until 2019 (rip xenon) were not going recollect all that lost good will.
I will never buy this.
Even looking at the screen with the borders between the two screens, I find it super misleading. The screen pretends to be one, but you open an app by touching an icon and it opens on the left one only. The icons remain hidden, and half of the desktop is on the right. Can I scroll the right scree? I mean.. scrolling left and right on one screen, and up and down on the other?
Funnily enough, I had the opposite reaction. This is the first tablet-like device that I would consider buying. I use two screens with my computer which works really well, and this seem just like that.
Funny, I don't find anything "misleading" about this and I'm usually a big critic of MS. I actually think this is the right way to do a mobile foldable.
My knee jerk reaction was to pan it for having huge gap in the middle. But then I'm looking at my own monitor desktop. On left side, I have work application. On right side I have web browser. exactly 50:50 split. They may be onto something.
And, for as much as they are charging for foldables, this setup seems like it will be much more resilient than the flexible plastic screens used elsewhere.
The rumor is that the Duo has been hardware-final since 2018. They were waiting for Windows 10X to be ready, but eventually decided to just launch it with Android instead of attempting to make a phone version of Windows 10X.
That explanation makes sense, if it's been in work for so long it's probably difficult internally to get the resources to bring it into line with current expectations.
Unfortunately v1 will probably bomb in its current state and we won't see the proper potential of the device.
This device runs Android, which is based on Linux. Other Surface devices have a varying degree of support for Linux. IIRC none of them work perfectly, but most of them do work (Pro, Go, Laptop, etc.). The Surface Studio, I have no idea about.
The "laptop" one with the flipout keyboard looks great.
I wasn't sure in the video - are these separate devices (large and small versions of the same thing)?
The laptop sized one would be awesome as a travel device if it were full-featured proper x86 device... I get the feeling these are android phones though right?
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[ 4.6 ms ] story [ 52.8 ms ] threadAs more manufacturers move to foldable devices, I see them licensing MSFT's android skin instead of going through the arduous process of developing one anew.
It might be what lets microsoft finally get a foothold in the smartphone market, after many failed attempts.
Edit: Anything that markets itself as a mobile phone and is targeted at the mainstream audience of course.
Arguably, the biggest single thing that killed their market position (aside from the launches of iOS and Android, of course) was that they didn't retain backward compatibility, so Windows Phone 7 and later were effectively a completely different OS. Getting into competition with yourself is rarely a winning strategy.
When Microsoft released Windows Phone 7, it really got people excited. It was a shot across Skeuomorph UI's bow. Big fonts, dark mode by default, flat and chromeless to an almost fault. It was a serious departure from the Windows Mobile days. People were (more) comfortable with it not being backward compatible. Plus WM had turned into a mess of scaling problems, 3rd party skins, over the top launchers, and apps that weren't necessary cross device compatible.
But then they did it again, Windows Phone 8 was not coming to any Windows Phone 7 devices. Even though MS originally said it would. Instead, all the WP7 phones got some 7.x feature update. Everyone showing off their shining new Nokias were burned during the honeymoon and that cooled interest. Especially when compared to Apple's sterling record.
And then, they did it again, sorta. Many of the Windows phone 8 devices were not going to get updates to Windows 10 Mobile. Worse yet, Microsoft walked the striking UI way back. Except for the launcher, things starter looking rather conventional.
There was no coming back from that. 41MP and real OIS, Zeiss optics and xenon flash. Things that were basically unheard of until 2019 (rip xenon) were not going recollect all that lost good will.
https://blogs.windows.com/windowsexperience/2019/10/02/intro...
One is based on Android and the other one in Windows 10X.
https://developer.microsoft.com/en-us/microsoft-365/virtual-...
Official SDKs are based on Android Java, Kotlin, Xamarin, React Native and PWAs.
Nope. Thank you.
As far as I can tell, there's no new information on the linked page, so I'm not sure why it's resurfacing (ba dum tisss).
[1] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=21137450
Source: https://www.windowscentral.com/surface-duo-spring-summer-ear...
Unfortunately v1 will probably bomb in its current state and we won't see the proper potential of the device.
My two most important criteria are not listed on their product page:
- do they usually sell matte screen?
- how is the hardware support for linux at launch?
I wasn't sure in the video - are these separate devices (large and small versions of the same thing)?
The laptop sized one would be awesome as a travel device if it were full-featured proper x86 device... I get the feeling these are android phones though right?
Edit: The larger device appears to be a "Surface Neo": https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/surface/devices/surface-neo
The marketing video for it has an Intel "CPU" animation so guessing this will be a "real" device?