28 comments

[ 6.0 ms ] story [ 59.5 ms ] thread
tldr; Still no price
This article was not about Surface but the OS that other OEMs will use to build their tablets/laptops. So if there was price coming, it would come from the OEMs and not Microsoft.
2.6 lb tablet... And people think the iPad is too heavy.
Where did that come from... Did you read the article?

"All devices will have a diagonal screen size between 10.1 and 11.6 inches, weigh between 520g and 1200g, and be between 8.35mm and 15mm thick. On the low end, 520g and 8.35mm would be considerably thinner and lighter than the iPad 2/3 and Galaxy Tab 10.1. Presumably the 1200g/15mm form factor is a laptop."

1200g = 1.2kg = 2.2 lbs/kg * 1.2kg = 2.6 lbs

[edit: HERP! I need to read the article more closely. Near the end of it, it does say that the larger values are presumably a laptop.]

If you don't read the article, at least read my comment ;)
Windows RT laptops? That'll work really great...
Where did you get 2.6lb from? By converting 1200g which the article explicitly says is probably a laptop?

The relevant part of the article:

All devices will have a diagonal screen size between 10.1 and 11.6 inches, weigh between 520g and 1200g, and be between 8.35mm and 15mm thick. On the low end, 520g and 8.35mm would be considerably thinner and lighter than the iPad 2/3 and Galaxy Tab 10.1. Presumably the 1200g/15mm form factor is a laptop.

Both of you really need to add emphasis to "Presumably the 1200g/15mm form factor is a laptop" part. It's the most important part of that blurb and completely miss-able/indistinguishable from the rest of the less important, already read details.
Still, don't you think it's a bit disingenuous to pick on the upper part of the range and totally ignore the lower end of the range? One could easily write a comment on the same lines, "Wow, just 520g, and you thought the iPad was light".
I only hope the OEMs also offer the same hardware without Windows. Choice is good.

Unfortunately, all the mentions of Microsoft working together with OEMs in developing single-chip touchscreens and so on may indicate Microsoft will want to limit availability of competing devices with different OSs.

As always, everybody loses but them.

There are a plethora of Android devices available from more OEMs than the few that are shipping Windows RT devices. I don't see that changing except for the fact that they're not selling very well.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Android_devices#T...

>Unfortunately, all the mentions of Microsoft working together with OEMs in developing single-chip touchscreens and so on may indicate Microsoft will want to limit availability of competing devices with different OSs

How will that stop Google from developing whatever they want in conjunction with the OEMs? Not to mention collaborating with their subsidiary Motorola. I don't see how Microsoft can limit that even if they wanted to.

> How will that stop Google

It won't. It'll only prevent these devices from getting different OSs.

Also, keep in mind I'm not talking about Android. I use Ubuntu every day and all the pieces are in place for Ubuntu-based fully-functional (as in "you can work exclusively on it") ARM devices. Windows on ARM's key "advantage" is the ability to run Office, but since Linuxes/BSDs on ARM (or MIPS, if you are so inclined) can run the full desktop software suite just like their x86 counterparts (perhaps more slowly, but that's beyond the point here), their advantage is negated. Their only remaining advantage is being able to run Microsoft Office.

More specifically...to run Microsoft Office...on a touch screen. The utility of this is still unexplored.
What stops people from using Office (RT) with a mouse/trackpad and keyboard? They're making Office for ARM, not Office for touch devices exclusively. ARM doesn't imply that you have to use touch screens.
>I use Ubuntu every day and all the pieces are in place for Ubuntu-based fully-functional (as in "you can work exclusively on it") ARM devices

What's stopping anyone(including OEMs) now or later when Windows RT launches from making "Ubuntu-based fully-functional" tablets? Why the obsession with trying to shoehorn Linux onto Windows RT tablets?

Because until OEMs start manufacturing tablets with sensible bootloaders that can boot anything, Windows RT devices will be the only game in town.

These tablets will be built in volume. Up until now, with x86 PCs, alternative OSs enjoyed an ecosystem of mass produced, cheap computers that could run competitive OSs. Microsoft is trying to stop this from happening in the ARM device space.

>Because until OEMs start manufacturing tablets with sensible bootloaders that can boot anything, Windows RT devices will be the only game in town.

WindowsRT tablets the only game in town? What? Whatever will happen to the iPad and all the Android tablets and why?

I use Ubuntu on my HP Touchpad. Functionally it works well, but in practice it's awful. it really seems to be expecting more than 1GB of RAM, even though I'm running Xfce. I can easily pin the processor at max with most tasks, even though it's a dual core 1.5Ghz. Touch is still awful, despite Unity. There's no good on-screen keyboard. Ubuntu is Windows 7; it looks good for touch but it's really not.

Everything works, but not well. I don't see Surface or other mass market tablets being able to run it any better.

A WinRT machine will not support installing a different OS (a pity but the writing's been on the wall about that since around the iPod), but the OEMs themselves own the tech used to build the device and can make equivalent devices for other OSes.
Not sure how much of it the own. The article mentions Microsoft being active in developing technology such as the single-chip touchscreen.

Which may be neatly sidestepped by LCDs similar to the Sharp ones expected to ship with the iPhone 5.

Would you level the same criticism at any of the other brands which are fairly OS-hardware tied?
AFAIK Google never demanded locked bootloaders ans Apple makes their own hardware. If Microsoft wants to cripple their own tablet, that's ok with me, but why demand their licensees to cripple theirs? It only shows how afraid they are and how low they are prepared to go.
What else would you run on it? Android? Why not just buy an Android tablet then?
> diagonal screen size between 10.1 and 11.6 inches, weigh between 520g and 1200g, and be between 8.35mm and 15mm thick

Tip for technical writers (I assume tech journalists consider themselves technical writers?): there is a space between the value and the units, whether you use Imperial or metric units.

Google 550g and 500 g

While the former is less common, you still see 17% of people using it. Looks like either is valid.

I am looking forward to the new devices if they're priced right. The specs seem right, I think Microsoft could be onto a winner here. I will definitely consider getting one of these, the interface is a hell of a lot nicer than the iPad or Galaxy tablets.