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Microsoft's Surface Caught Windows OEMs By Surprise

MojoKid writes "Microsoft's Surface isn't just an attempt to take on the iPad or an articulation of MS's independent design philosophy — it's a fundamental threat against the OEMs who've spent decades as Microsoft's partners and collectively destroyed the industry's perception of the PC as a high-value product. The adversarial roots run deep. Microsoft didn't tell its partners about Surface until three days before the event and gave only the most minimal details on the product. Only the largest vendors even got a phone call; Asus and Acer, the 4th and 5th largest PC manufacturers worldwide, have stated that they had no idea anything was coming. For OEMs who have spent decades working in lock-step with Redmond, that's deeply unsettling."

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  1. Re:So this will really be the Linux Desktop year? by interval1066 · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Linux has been my desktop for years (yeah, I know, I'm one out of the few), but seriously, even with all the complaints (valid or otherwise) I really think the big problem Linux has with the desktop is that its not windows. I'm hoping that will change real soon now.

    --
    Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'