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Microsoft Handhelds Portables Hardware

Microsoft Slashes Prices On Surface 330

McGruber writes "Thursday, The Verge broke the news that Microsoft was slashing the price of its tablets — the price of the 32-gig Surface RT plummeted by 42%! Staples, TigerDirect and many other retailers are already selling the tablets at the lowered prices. I wonder what Microsoft will do for customers who purchased a tablet right before the price drop?"
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Microsoft Slashes Prices On Surface

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  • Price Adjustment (Score:5, Informative)

    by Oysterville ( 2944937 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:12PM (#44279221)
    I doubt that Microsoft will do much of anything for those early adopters, but check with your place of purchase. Frequently they have a price guarantee that will cover price adjustments both at that store and with competitors.
    • by Jeremiah Cornelius ( 137 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:25PM (#44279329) Homepage Journal

      "I wonder what Microsoft will do for customers who purchased a tablet right before the price drop?"

      Salute them as 'early adopters' and congratulate them for getting in early to avoid the rush.

      • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

        by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:44PM (#44279449)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • Re:Price Adjustment (Score:4, Interesting)

          by Billly Gates ( 198444 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:56PM (#44279531) Journal

          So the more intellectual question is what is next if the surface fails?

          I do not know of any ARM rt devices out there. I heard a rumor about an Acer but have never seen it.

          Will this mean Windows 9 will be part of the WIndows 7 lineage and not WIndows 8/Windows mobile? Or will MS try a surface 2 and keep blowing money into it like they did with Bing and xbox for over a half a decade before they broke even? (Does bing make money yet?)

          Personally I kind of got excited when it came out as Apple has a monopoly on the tablet market since they banned Samsung and other droid tablets out of the market here in the US for using icons and rounded corners. I have seen 1 android tablet in my lifetime by someone and that is it as everyone loves their ipads. But the surface lacked even a GPU unit and no cell phone service WTF. How usefull is this POS if I can not even get a map and weather reports if I am on the road? Seriously.

          The surface pro still doesn't have either making it just a laptop and not a tablet and no disk space

          • Re:Price Adjustment (Score:5, Interesting)

            by tnk1 ( 899206 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @04:52PM (#44279921)

            I have an android tablet. I like it just fine. Apple was not an impediment to me buying one.

            I generally end up with iPhones, but that's mostly because work keeps giving me them, and I see no reason to buy an android phone simply because it isn't Apple. For a tablet, though, I prefer something I can play with (and root if need be) and not have to deal with Apple getting in my way.

            The RT stuff was doomed from the get-go. MS was offering a product for a need that no one has, and they didn't provide anything better than the existing products in the market.

            • by davester666 ( 731373 ) on Monday July 15, 2013 @01:28AM (#44282031) Journal

              What are you saying you heretic!

              Bill says that in order to do serious Enterprise work, you need a stylus, a keyboard and Microsoft Office. The Surface RT has all three [well, you need to spring for the keyboard and stylus, but oh, that satisfying 'click' when you attach the keyboard to the Surface]!

              And Bill knows!

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by jbolden ( 176878 )

            I own a surface pro, that's a very nice form factor for Windows 8. I'm a Mac guy and I'd say it is likely the best secondary computing device around. Big enough to work as a bad laptop, small enough to act as a tablet. Powerful enough to run Windows 7 and Windows 8 hardware. Capacitive touch screen for Metro application. Resistive touchscreen for OneNote and other classic tablet applications.

            If you need a powerful machine it can't be your primary. It is a pity that no one is really making truly powerfu

          • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

            by ak3ldama ( 554026 )

            can not even get a map and weather reports

            I don't know how anyone got around before, we must have all just been lost and looking at the sky.

          • by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 15, 2013 @12:04AM (#44281813)

            > Will this mean Windows 9 will be part of the WIndows 7 lineage and not WIndows 8/Windows mobile?

            We can only dream. Hey, if Intel could admit Pentium 4 was a horrible mistake, Microsoft can do the same with Metro.

            One of my coworkers put it well... Microsoft has turned so many people so vehemently against Metro by virtue of fucking up Windows 8 in its name, if you forced him to choose between:

            a) walking around the mall wearing a leather jockstrap and high heels, or

            b) being seen at DefCon or BlackHat using a Surface tablet,

            he'd sigh, put on the leather jockstrap, and try to not break his neck walking in heels... because he values his good name and reputation too much to be seen in public with something as scorned and taboo as a WindowsRT tablet.

        • by roc97007 ( 608802 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:57PM (#44279535) Journal

          > the Surface had giant FAIL written all over it almost from the start

          Well, the RT definitely did. I don't think it's clear yet whether the "Surface Pro" (or whatever they called it -- the one on Intel that actually runs Windows) is worthy of the FAIL sticker just yet.

          It's important to keep the RT (WinCE warmed over) and the Pro separate. They're distinct products. Although, I wonder whether the RT is dragging the Pro down with it.

          • Re:Price Adjustment (Score:5, Interesting)

            by ericloewe ( 2129490 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @04:21PM (#44279715)

            I firmly believe that the Surface Pro has, at the very least, a decent niche with only two competitors: Samsung Ativ Smart PC/Smart PC Pro and Sony Vaio duo 11/13. The former has atrocious build quality (keyboard connector has one pin covered by plastic) and shows signs of being rushed to market (Even the official screen protector film is labeled inside-out). The latter is heavy, has an inferior digitizer (Wacom on Surface Pro/Samsungs vs. N-Trig) and in my experience, Sony does its best to sneak out of paying for warranty repairs. Additionally, both have questionable software at best (Horrible Samsung drivers, traditional Sony bloatware).

            • Sony does not like supporting their computers. Dont buy them, no matter how sexy their hardware is.
            • by RulerOf ( 975607 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @04:50PM (#44279911)

              I firmly believe that the Surface Pro has, at the very least, a decent niche with only two competitors

              I'm typing this from a ThinkPad Helix, which I decided to purchase as I felt it offered me a little bit more of what I was looking for than the Surface Pro did. It's definitely got its faults, but it's worth pointing out that they're Lenovo's faults rather than anything to do with Windows.

              It's the right product for me, but the thing holding it back is---of course---the price. Microsoft has a huge advantage with x86 being on their side, but unless they can get the platform down to a price that's competitive with other products in the same market, at the rate things are going that advantage provided by the platform itself will likely evaporate as other platforms' app catalogs close the gap and render the advantage of "being Wintel" completely moot.

              That's not to say that we're not at least halfway there already. An iPad is a paradoxically capable device in a world that Microsoft has ruled for decades on compatibility and ubiquity alone, especially given the limitations of the hardware and form factor itself.

              • Re:Price Adjustment (Score:4, Informative)

                by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) * on Sunday July 14, 2013 @05:20PM (#44280117) Homepage Journal

                Surface was never meant to compete with the iPad. It's more like a laptop/tablet hybrid. The iPad is about mini-apps, mostly viewing data and playing simple games. There are exceptions but look at it this way: Surface comes with a keyboard and stand designed into the form factor, the iPad is a purely hand-held touch operated device.

                Microsoft's target market is people who want to work on Windows creating documents or writing longish emails but also want a tablet form factor they can easily carry with them or use hand-held for viewing. Of course being Microsoft they completely failed to communicate this and further confused things by having two different platforms with the introduction of RT.

                The point is that it should really be compared to netbooks or Chromebooks, in which case it was still massively overpriced but an interesting twist on the idea.

                • Re:Price Adjustment (Score:4, Interesting)

                  by ericloewe ( 2129490 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @05:36PM (#44280213)

                  Not netbooks, ultrabooks. It's mostly comparable to an ultrabook in the format of a tablet. From that point of view, it works. Netbooks were always intended for extra-lightweight content creation and consumption. Chromebooks seem to be an attempt at throwing stuff at the wall to see what sticks. If you a look at the Surface Pro like something you can easily carrry around but still do some heavier (non-GPU) tasks if needed (the flexibility of full Windows helps a lot), it makes sense and is decently priced, considering its competitors.
                  External connectivity is a bit more limited, but still workable - that's the major difference between it and ultrabooks, besides screen size.

          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            by oPless ( 63249 )

            It's important to keep the RT (WinCE warmed over)

            WRONG It's actually windows 8 compiled for arm.

        • You had me at "Meh if you were dumb enough to buy one"

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by umafuckit ( 2980809 )

          ... but considering we are talking about a company with a history of abandoning products that don't become hits (Zune, Sidekick,Kin,WinPhone 7) do you REALLY want to take the chance?

          I'm no MSFT fan, but another way of saying this is that they abandoned products that weren't profitable. Why would any company do otherwise?

          • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

            by Anonymous Coward

            This particular company runs ad campaigns attempting to vilify its competitors for doing the same, with the very argument that GP used.

      • by dottrap ( 1897528 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @04:28PM (#44279749)

        "I wonder what Microsoft will do for customers who purchased a tablet right before the price drop?"

        Microsoft has great products they can use to compensate those early adopters.

        How about a brown Zune?
        (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zune#Sales)

        Or maybe a WebTV?
        (http://slashdot.org/story/13/07/07/1224244/microsoft-says-goodbye-to-webtvmsn-tv)

        Well Zune Pass has got to work (ForSure)!

    • Caveat emptor, anyone?
    • Re:Price Adjustment (Score:5, Interesting)

      by mysidia ( 191772 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @05:10PM (#44280065)

      If the direction of the price change was the opposite; say a $150 price increase. Could they reasonably expect every buyer to come in and pay the difference?

  • Linux? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by frisket ( 149522 ) <peter@ s i l m a r i l . ie> on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:12PM (#44279225) Homepage
    Can I install Linux on one of these? Android?
  • by waddgodd ( 34934 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:12PM (#44279229) Homepage Journal

    It's a first-gen hardware product from Microsoft, they should have to pay you for the headaches you're inevitably going to have

    • Just wait... $149, nine months from now.

      • Just wait... $149, nine months from now.

        And by then, someone will have worked out how to install Android on it.

  • by hsmith ( 818216 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:12PM (#44279233)
    That microsoft has to slash the price to fight off people wanting to buy them?

    Is that the correct spin?

    Lets face it. Microsoft has tried to push the "Convertible laptop / tablet" on the market since 2000 (even before maybe?) - and no one wants it. They simply cannot grasp that it isn't what the consumer (even enterprise wants). People want tablets to consume content, not create it.
    • by supersat ( 639745 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:25PM (#44279325)
      The only content you can create on the Surface are Office docs. And only personal content -- use of the included Office software for any organization (including non-profits) requires a separate, full Office license.
    • by Compuser ( 14899 )

      That is not exactly true. I would want a Surface badly. However, the only version that has a worthwhile ecosystem of software is the Pro tablet (full Windows version). And the Pro tablet is about 4X overpriced.

      If MS came to market with only 128Gb Surface pro, threw in a cover keyboard and priced the package at $300, then it would fly off the shelves. Just becuase they mis-priced the offering does not mean noone wants it.

      • by Blaskowicz ( 634489 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:49PM (#44279473)

        Well, I want coke to cost 1 euro per gram, also retail Windows 8 should cost 10 euros and Windows Server 2012 Datacenter would cost 80 euros at most (granting you a license to install on 15 physical machines).
        That's not possible yet, so an option is to get drunk with red wine and use linux.

      • That is not exactly true. I would want a Surface badly. However, the only version that has a worthwhile ecosystem of software is the Pro tablet (full Windows version). And the Pro tablet is about 4X overpriced.

        If MS came to market with only 128Gb Surface pro, threw in a cover keyboard and priced the package at $300, then it would fly off the shelves. Just becuase they mis-priced the offering does not mean noone wants it.

        True for the most part, although you still have to deal with Windows 8. Throw in Win7 and it's a deal.

        • The Pro already sells just fine (contrary to Slashdot's never-with-citations snide comments; I know folks who work at MS (comes of being in the tech industry in this part of the country) and they have trouble keeping the up with demand. You can't buy a big clunky laptop with the Surface Pro's SSD, CPU, RAM, and resolution for $300 (I doubt you could get it for $600); are you insane? Throw in the capacitive touchscreen and Wacom stylus digitizer, ultra-thin keyboard, lightweight but absurdly durable vapor-deposited magnesium chassis, USB3, dual webcams, etc. and... yeah, no. The total manufacturing price is probably still well under $1000, but after all the additional expences of getting a product to market, $1200 is a good deal at that price.

          Obviously, it might not be a good deal that you personally are interested in, but you do not represent the whole market. For people who want a portable, durable, and powerful computer usable either as a tablet or a laptop - and they do exist, for sure - it's an excellent price. The market is bearing it admirably.

          RT... not so much. The hardware is excellent, but the OS really is stupid. By changing a single flag in the kernel, they could remove the "MS-signed-only" restriction from desktop apps (there has been a hack out there for months which does it for you at bootup). They could add "desktop apps compiled for ARM" to the already-existing dekstop apps (for x86) section of the store, in addition to the Metro-style apps. They could include an x86 dynamic recompilation layer - a single volunteer developer has hacked up a pretty good basic one already, and the stuff he's having trouble with is the stuff that MS (with their access to the Windows source code) could fix trivially - for running old or simple x86 apps without recompilation (since it thunks to the native ARM system libraries where possible, the performance is much better than one might expect, though still years behind modern x86).

          Microsoft seems determined to drive that platform into the ground, though.

      • 300 bucks pays for the processor and the screen, maybe. Your expectations are unreasonable.

        • Microsoft's understanding of the market is what is unreasonable. This thing should be dirt cheap. It is badly engineered and for the realities of the current market. RT was MS doing what MS always does, pulling its deformed dick out and expecting us to marvel at it.
      • by XaXXon ( 202882 )

        The goal of a company isn't to move units, it's to make money. Saying they could move units if they sold them -- what amounts to basically giving them away -- isn't a revelation.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) * on Sunday July 14, 2013 @05:26PM (#44280159) Homepage Journal

        Who else does a reasonable spec tablet with 128GB of storage for $300?

        You should be comparing it to cheap laptops, not cheap tablets. That's basically what you want - a small laptop with touchscreen and detachable keyboard. Finding a reasonable quality one with 128GB of storage for $300 may again prove challenging.

    • by Dupple ( 1016592 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:34PM (#44279385)

      While it's quite possible to 'create' and do 'useful work' on a tablet it certainly seems more geared towards consumption. What Microsoft hasn't understood is that people use their software because they have to at work.

      Office is not compelling. IE is not compelling. This is Microsofts attempt to move their monopoly to a new computing sector. It won't work. People don't want to use their software.

      • by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @04:50PM (#44279903)

        >"This is Microsofts attempt to move their monopoly to a new computing sector. It won't work. People don't want to use their software."

        ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^THIS^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

        Microsoft simply does not understand that their "popularity" in the computing market is mostly due due to their proprietary lock-in, and not due to free market choice and preference.

        I bet if they offered IDENTICAL hardware to all the Android and IOS tablets for an IDENTICAL price, they still would not be able to sell enough to matter.

  • serious problem (Score:5, Insightful)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:16PM (#44279263) Journal

    I wonder what Microsoft will do for customers who purchased a tablet right before the price drop?"

    Really, if those people joined together they might be able fill a Starbucks. Imagine if they started a protest against Microsoft, the damage they could do......

    Microsoft will do the same thing they did when they came out with the Zune to help all those people who bought "Plays For Sure" music, nothing at all.

    • by tsa ( 15680 )

      OK but when Microsoft says it "Plays for sure" you can be sure that it doesn't, otherwise they wouldn't put so much emphasis on a simple thing like playing music.

      • OK but when Microsoft says it "Plays for sure" you can be sure that it doesn't, otherwise they wouldn't put so much emphasis on a simple thing like playing music.

        ...and now the Microsoft marketing guys are overusing the phrase "it just works". Hmm.

      • Plays for Sure , god i love the schadenfreude that whole fiasco provides me to this day. I knew the instant it was announced it was doomed to failure.
      • by gmhowell ( 26755 )

        OK but when Microsoft says it "Plays for sure" you can be sure that it doesn't, otherwise they wouldn't put so much emphasis on a simple thing like playing music.

        "Plays for sure" is what MS Translate spits out when you enter "arbeit macht frei."

  • by cold fjord ( 826450 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:18PM (#44279281)

    Cash the check.

  • I wonder what Microsoft will do for customers who purchased a tablet right before the price drop?

    MS should do nothing. They were among the few people to buy something above the value the market would ultimately be willing to accept.

    This is not Microsoft's responsibility to deal with.

    When you buy something, you should be doing your due diligence to make sure you are getting more in product value than cash value you are trading for it.

    If you make a bad trade: it's not the manufacturer's duty to tr

    • I wonder what Microsoft will do for customers who purchased a tablet right before the price drop?

      MS should do nothing. They were among the few people to buy something above the value the market would ultimately be willing to accept.

      This is not Microsoft's responsibility to deal with.

      When you buy something, you should be doing your due diligence to make sure you are getting more in product value than cash value you are trading for it.

      If you make a bad trade: it's not the manufacturer's duty to try and console you about your decisionmaking error.

      Agreed. In all fairness, I feel the same about the iphone. I appear to be alone in that, though.

    • by isdnip ( 49656 )

      I agree. Folks who paid the higher price must have felt it was worth it to them.

      Both of them.

  • Bad math (Score:5, Informative)

    by Dan East ( 318230 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:23PM (#44279311) Journal

    the price of the 32-gig Surface RT plummeted by 42%

    That's wrong - the price has been reduced by 30%. The new price of the 32 gig Surface is $349. The original price was $499 (the price of all models is being reduced by $150). You divide the discount by the original price, not the new reduced price, to find the percentage reduction. 150/499=30% (150/349 is indeed 42%, but that is meaningless in this case)

    • > The new price of the 32 gig Surface is $349.

      It's STILL that high? Why is this even news? "Today the Surface RT went from really stupendously overpriced to merely shockingly overpriced." Move along, nothing to see here.

  • by maudface ( 1313935 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:24PM (#44279319)

    This remind people of anything much?

    Entirely unsurprising, good riddance.

    • by bored ( 40072 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:47PM (#44279461)

      The difference with the touchpad is that the fire-sale price was 1/2 to 1/3 of these devices.

      Furthermore, it wasn't nearly as locked down. There are some fairly nice android distributions for the touchpad, and it was as easy to root as typing "webos20090606" into the search bar. Plus, there is a fairly large homebrew community, providing everything from an xserver and ubuntu like environments to popular game emulators (NES/etc) allowing access to large catalogs of applications not originally written for the device.

      Best darn $250 i've spent in years (I got one with a touchstone, case and keyboard), as I also provide one of the more popular applications in the app store and its more than paid for the device and the few dozen hours I spent porting/writting the app.

    • The difference is, HP intentionally killed the Touchpad. They bought the IP, released the product, and then lost their nerve. This is almost the opposite of what is happening with the RT.

  • by Picass0 ( 147474 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:25PM (#44279333) Homepage Journal

    Right now MS adverts for the surface are nothing more than hipster dipshits dancing on a boardroom table and spining the Surface around. There is nothing infomative, nothing to tell the consumer why they might consider purchasing this vs. an Ipad or a decent Android tablet.

    MS can't act like Apple. People already know why they might like to have an iPad. They either own one or have a fiend who does. Surface doesn't have familiarity to fall back on. It looks like an overgrown Zune and unless MS tells people otherwise they will assume it's just an "also ran" in the tablet race.

    Slashing prices it nice but it reaks of desperation. I might be tempted to think they are dumping existing inventory prior to dropping the product line.

    • Right now MS adverts for the surface are nothing more than hipster dipshits dancing on a boardroom table and spining the Surface around. There is nothing infomative, nothing to tell the consumer why they might consider purchasing this vs. an Ipad or a decent Android tablet.

      I have come to suspect the reason for this is that there is no reason to purchase this device, and they know it.

      MS can't act like Apple. People already know why they might like to have an iPad. They either own one or have a fiend who does. Surface doesn't have familiarity to fall back on. It looks like an overgrown Zune and unless MS tells people otherwise they will assume it's just an "also ran" in the tablet race.

      Slashing prices it nice but it reaks of desperation. I might be tempted to think they are dumping existing inventory prior to dropping the product line.

      Oh, MS *can* act like Apple in this way, and I would fully expect them to. For a long long time, Microsoft ruled certain segments of the market, (still does, in fact) and "you'll buy it because it's Windows" has been ingrained in Microsoft corporate culture for so long that they can't help but continue to act like that, even in areas where it's clearly not working for them. It'd take a complete

    • by jfruh ( 300774 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:53PM (#44279505)

      Right now MS adverts for the surface are nothing more than hipster dipshits dancing on a boardroom table and spining the Surface around ... MS can't act like Apple.

      iPad and iPhone ads are actually pretty good about showing you in succinct ways what you can do with the product. They're usually made up of quick, targeted clips of apps in use. It's kind of flabbergasted me that Microsoft hasn't done the same thing with their TV ads, especially when it comes to Office. It's almost as if their marketing dept. came to the conclusion that "We have to fight Apple on their own terms" without actually sitting down to watch how Apple markets its products.

      • by ffejie ( 779512 )

        iPad and iPhone ads are actually pretty good about showing you in succinct ways what you can do with the product.

        They were solely focused on use cases, until these series of ads came out. Our signature. [youtube.com] I find these ads ridiculously pretentious. Apple has earned that right to be pretentious, but I do wish they went back to their old style of showing the product doing something cool.

      • > It's kind of flabbergasted me that Microsoft hasn't done the same thing with their TV ads

        I'm not surprised at all. It's not possible to demonstrate actually apps and not have the consumer coming away thinking "it's just like Windows, only smaller".

  • by 1s44c ( 552956 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @03:34PM (#44279391)

    "Everything else failed, lets sell them at cost price."

    • "Everything else failed, lets sell them at cost price."

      But but but... did they really cost $350 to produce? Cost must have been lower than that, right?

  • If you want the plastic keyboard shown in ads, that's $100 and if you want 64GB flash instead of 32GB that's another $100 (dunno if the tablet has micro SD?)

    That can be serious desktop or laptop money. For instance here [ldlc.com]'s a 11.6" laptop with ivy bridge Celeron, 240GB flash, bluetooth 4.0 for about what a keyboard + 64GB Surface costs.

  • Sad thing is (Score:2, Informative)

    by obarthelemy ( 160321 )
    Even at that price, I'd probably not buy a Surface-RT if my current Android broke. And looking around me, I find nobody I'd recommend it to: you have to
    - need Office
    - but no other Windows App because those don't run on RT (bneither does AD, Outlook... none of the "pro" stuff)
    - and no other serious App in general, because Win8-RT is still missing a *good* apps for the basics (RSS, dlna, multi-format video player, etc etc)
    - no games except a handful
    - not want 7", nor any weird stuff (phone with your 3G...)
    - b
  • This is what happened right before HP gave up on tablets...

  • by Zero__Kelvin ( 151819 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @04:14PM (#44279673) Homepage

    "I wonder what Microsoft will do for customers who purchased a tablet right before the price drop?"

    The same thing they will do for customers who purchased a tablet right after the price drop [photobucket.com]

  • But will it run Android?
  • Even at $350, as someone who uses Windows primarily on desktop and laptop (okay, Linux on servers), I just can't see what I'd do with it. Drop the Surface Pro down to that price and now I'm interested.

  • by readingaccount ( 2909349 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @08:06PM (#44280903)

    Microsoft desperately wants to be Apple, that much should be obvious by now. With all the dancing hipster ads for Surface trying to appear cool and in touch, it just... doesn't... work.

    Microsoft still has something of a business/corporate reputation. They make operating systems to run Office on, to perform spreadsheet work, boring but necessary work. That's their image. Apple deliberately target non-business customers in the vast majority of their products and marketing - they have for a while now and that is THEIR image. Microsoft can't just try to perform a 180 and appear like Apple - that's like a 50 year old Steve Buscemi trying to act hip to young people by saying "How do you do, fellow kids?" It's comedic when done by an actor - but embarrassing when done by a corporation.

    They say a business must grow or die. Microsoft have reached the limits of desktop operating systems - they've owned their sector for so long that they can't grow in it. That's fine, go for it. But emulating Apple when there already IS an Apple is not a strategy for a leader to take.

  • by hodet ( 620484 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @08:47PM (#44281093)
    Windows in the consumer space is boring. Most people do not want a windows tablet or windows phone, because it represents that old boring desktop software to them. I think Windows should live on as the companies enterprise brand because the enterprise likes safe and boring and will continue to pay big bucks for that. What the consumer wants is exciting and edgy and that is why I think their consumer products just need a total rebranding. I am not a marketing guy, I am an IT guy, but it just seems obvious to me that they should dump the windows name for the consumer space. Since Xbox seems to have some traction maybe they could brand around that theme in some way for all consumer devices. But what the hell do I know, I am just a cubicle shmuck and maybe I don't get it, but Microsoft has proven without a doubt that they don't either.
  • by nanospook ( 521118 ) on Sunday July 14, 2013 @09:39PM (#44281297)
    Microsoft has tablets?

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