Why Microsoft's Surface Pro Could Fail
Nerval's Lobster writes "Microsoft's Surface Pro boasts one feature that could rapidly become an Achilles Heel, especially if Microsoft intends for the device to compete against Apple's iPad and a host of lightweight Google Android touch-screens. In a Nov. 29 Tweet to a customer, the official Surface Twitter feed claimed: 'We expect it [Surface Pro] to have approx. half the battery life of Surface with Windows RT.' That means Surface Pro will have roughly four hours of battery life. That's roughly half the battery life (if not less) of Apple's various iPads, the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, Research In Motion's PlayBook, Hewlett-Packard's now-cancelled TouchPad, and Motorola's all-but-forgotten Xoom. In other words, pretty much every tablet currently on the market. Nor can the Surface Pro compete with other tablets on price. The 64GB version of the device will retail for $899, with the 128GB version coming in a little higher at $999."
It competes with ultrabooks. Unfortunately, it doesn't compare all that favourably to ultrabooks either (about the same price, same weight, smaller screen, no keyboard included), and stealing sales from Wintel ultrabooks doesn't really help Microsoft or Intel.
Only a stupid person would think this. It is by FAR the most powerful tablet on the market, so obviously the battery life will suffer. To run full x86 applications will drain battery - its the best that it could be at 4 hours without being financially unviable. It's the same amount of battery life that laptop/tablet hybrids that already exist have.
The iPad may have more battery life, but it can't replace a laptop. Pro Surface can, and that is it's killer feature. Battery life at 4 hours is fine (plus, since it supports USB 3.0, how long until someone makes a USB charging block that gives you a full charge that you can carry around with you? Not long is the answer)
It's a full-blown Windows 8 laptop in a tablet form factor, stop comparing it to the iPad, the Galaxy Tab, the Playbook, the TouchPad, the Xoom, the Transformer Prime, etc....
You can get a real laptop that does more, has more flexibility, more processing power/ram/storage/battery life/choice of operating system, for less.
Can someone please explain to why flash memory in phones and tablets is so damn expensive? They charge in $100 increments to double storage space. It's ridiculous. At first I thought it was just scumbag Apple gouging its iTards on pricing but now MS is doing it as well. You would think they would charge less for storage to gain some kind of competitive advantage.
The jury is still out, of course, but I'm going to take a hard look at the Surface Pro because it's an ultra portable, fully powered laptop. I have a Nexus 7 and they are in no way comparable. The Nexus is for light websurfing and gaming on the couch, the Surface could be for professional use as my main work computer.
Just load Linux on it. Bet it gets better battery life without all the bloat.
Decent CPU, memory and hi-res display. Four-to-five hours is good commuting/coffee shop time, so while its a not a perma-road-warrior machine, its not horrible.
http://www.cmswire.com/cms/customer-experience/microsoft-takes-the-wraps-off-surface-pro-tablets-018506.php
Forget battery life - price is way too high.
I'd love to have a 7-8 inch Surface...if the price was around $250-280 and it included Microsoft Office. Instead, I'm moving my wife and kids Nexus 7s ($200/pop) and hooking them up to Google Docs. I've even abandoned my iPad/iPod infrastructure at this point - tablets are way too fragile (and easily stolen) to be paying $400+ for each one.
I'm not exactly shocked by this, with more power comes more power consumption. Although I can see how this can be a downside when one is evaluating the usefulness of the device for their purposes. I'm not a fan of Microsoft Products, but I can see why it would be tough to overcome this (at least in the first iteration).
~theCzar
good the faster they retool 8 / merto the better
should read, why the surface pro will fail.
1000$ is way too high. Hit the 500$ and then it will compete with high end tablets. Until then there is nothing new with it. They made touch tablets back in the early 2000s that ran x86 chips that never got off the ground either. Too expensive, poor battery life and bulky. Too bad intel is not competitive with lightweight arm chips. The longer microsoft and intel won't compete the more and more people will start using them as their main computers.
It's got everything. You can do everything with it. A proverbial Swiss Army Knife. It's got it all. It's gonna be cool...unless you turn it on.
It will be very hard to convince people to use a Surface Pro as their all-in-one device when you are left with a little more than 32 Gb of space on a 899$ device.
... it'll join the Surface and Windows Phone? Perhaps they should stick to video game consoles...
So... who can make hardware?
Apple? Like the newton. Like the pippin. Like the iphone 4 too?
It's very easy to point out flaws, but like it or not microsoft has advanced computing like no other company in the world.
They just need to put down ballmer.
It runs windows 8!
It's just too expensive; only clueless, rich snobs with more money than brains can afford it!
Sincerely,
Apple User
sigs are for losers (except to point out that sigs are for losers)
Cowardice in Microsoft fo not having the GUTS to OPENLY ADMIT that the so called RT Professional Windows 8 is a DUD thanks to the bold guy who was just "consensually" fired for royally screwing up the Windows 8.... Boy is this going to go down history (and hysteria) as the greatest flop of all times...
consensus is they can make one hell of a keyboard though! :D
Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
When was the last time you have heard of the red ring of death, and what is wrong with Zune hardware?
Bow before me, for I am root.
What about XP? Windows 7? The entire server family of Windows? MS Office in general other than one UI aspect that some people like and others don't like? They make some pretty good software. Sure, they've had some blunders like Bob, Clippy, Me and Vista... but even those provided some insight and innovations that MS could use later on. I expect Windows 8 to be another insight-provider, but it's too early to call.
In spite of RRoD issues, the Xbox and 360 have still been wildly popular... I'd call it a success by most relevant metrics. They tried the Zune... it didn't work as planned, although marketing played a major part in its failure above and beyond any technical failures.
Reflecting back, it is sort of amazing how far Microsoft has fallen. From being nearly synonymous with everything computer related to now being the last one you think of when it comes to the technology that is nearest to us (our cell phones and tablets), it is stunning. And everything they make now looks like a desperate me-too move. Even more broadly, just a few years ago I was working in all Microsoft platforms from server and web development to desktop and office automation. Now, with the exception of Exchange, I don't even see Microsoft products. Amazing.
> Why don't we have an article on why Linux failed on the desktop?
Okay, here's your article about why Linux failed on the desktop. Explanation is simple. Microsoft has had a powerful entrenched monopoly on the desktop. The phenomena of software lock-in is very real. IBM learned this in the 60's. Competing desktop OSes never stood a chance. Does that answer your question about Linux on the desktop? It doesn't matter how good any competitor is against an entrenched monopolist.
In areas where Microsoft does not have an entrenched monopoly, it does not know how to compete. Competition is not even in their DNA. They have never had to compete. I don't think they even know how to compete on a level playing field. They cannot participate in a competitive market on their own merits. They simply must resort to dirty tricks. It's like predicting the sun rising in the East. It's like when long distance monopoly was broken and AT&T did not know how to compete on long distance. Sprint and MCI ate their lunch.
Furthermore, Microsoft has no vision. None. Zero. Every product from Microsoft has been copied from someone else, or acquired from someone else. To the extent some of these products are excellent, that is simply the result of pouring buckets of monopoly money into them.
As for Linux, in every area except the desktop, Linux rules the world and is gaining ground by the day.
Even more generally, open source, in general, is destined to always win. Even against well financed commercial alternatives. Proprietary products may be superior in the short term. But open source is here for the long term (forever). It's improvement can sometimes seem slow, but it just keeps inexorably improving until it is good enough, and then eventually best.
I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
- It's a shitty tablet: expensive, thick, heavy, short battery life, no mobile broadband.
- If you really need one in order to run your software, then you really need a laptop (or at least an ultrabook). In my opinion, it's not a shitty laptop, but neither is it a good one, especially for that price.
So, who needs this? Almost no one. In fact, maybe no one at all.
Why can't it run software for Windows 8 RT?
I thought RT used .net and thus the software would be supported on both arm and x86.
The biggest problem I see with the surface pro, is that it is a tablet with no tablet software, because it can't run RT software. So it is a niche marked, even within the niche windows tablet marked.
Well, yes. I love my Microsoft ComfortCurve 2000, which coincidentally is (or was, anyhow) the cheapest one they make.
Their mice are decent too. I prefer Logitech, but I've never had any major complaints about Microsoft's mice.
But I liked Clippy...
I'm never away from a charger for more than a few hours, so this seems like a good alternative to my Andriod tablets since it'll allow me to run Windows apps and my own .Net software. It's obviously not for the Microsoft haters, but for those of us who make a living in the Microsoft ecosystem, it can be very useful.
add a couple hundred and you can get a macbook air, so much better, no antivirus programs needed to be running at all times etc. al.
at $999, the macbook air is superior to the surface, comes with a real keyboard, and double the battery life and 1/4 the thickness of surface!
Surface Pro will have extra battery in the keyboard to boost the battery life.
Where is this "Windows XP was good" coming from recently? It wasn't, its security was terrible, it's playschool interface embarrassing, and its usability poor. People got used to it, and its worst blunders (security) were somewhat patched up, but it wasn't ever good. The reason Vista bombed was because it had to reverse a heap of XP shit, and that was always going to hurt.
Surface RT is the competitor for iPad/Nexus/Kindle/etc. Surface Pro's competition is UltraBooks, MacBook Air, etc.
consensus is they can make one hell of a keyboard though! :D
Yeah, too bad they forgot to include one with the Pro.
Can I put Linux on it?
21st Century Renaissance Man
simply because it's the only tablet-that-can-also-sorta-function-as-a-laptop that can join domains and run a full version of office, including outlook.
where microsoft really failed, tho, is by not having a metro outlook app ready at launch and by not allowing windows rt to join/be managed by domains.
the zunes hardware problem was not technical in nature it was purely aesthetic, in that it is commonly cited as looking like a turd.
the other problem it had is one of the same ones that is now plaguing Mickysoft they are/were very late to market are/were over priced and look like "me too!" products
---Saying gnome 3 is better than windows 8 not so much a compliment as it is damning with light praise.
ASUS and Fujitsu both sell tablets in that price range that run windows and linux that have a 4 hour battery life.
Epic freaking fail Microsoft! These things are no different than the tablet I could buy 4 years ago.
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
The Xbox is wildly popular because MS bought its market position. It will probably be years more before it starts making Redmond money.
The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
yes after 10 years of bug fixes xp looks great it didn't when it first came out. as for seven its is much better but much of that is from coming off of the disaster that was vista and needing a real 64 bit desktop (i know there was XP 64 bit pro but it had little hardware support) and standing next to the brainf#ck that is windows 8. as for the server edition how long do you wait before you transition your servers over to the new OS? sp1? R2?
---Saying gnome 3 is better than windows 8 not so much a compliment as it is damning with light praise.
I have an ExoPC. It gets about 4 hours of battery life. With current x86 mobile chips, that's about all you're going to get without killing the performance
The surface pro isn't competing with the ipad or the android tablets. It's targeted to those who need to be able to run existing windows applications, but want the convenience of a touchscreen tablet. That's what I wanted when I bought the Exo and it's why I'm interested in the surface pro. I didn't expect as long battery life.
If Microsoft knows anything they aren't expecting huge surface pro sales.
This article is worthless. I don't need another reason why the surface/surface pro can fail. I already know it's going to fail.
How about you write an article about why it could succeed. Go ahead, just come up with one good reason to buy it. That would make for a far more interesting article.
... than to open your mouth and prove it.
Message for Microsoft above.
Microsoft is proving they don't get it. They are proving they aren't looking at what is going on our there or what interests users. How long before the stock traders take notice and the stock value fails? (I know when that will happen... when they show losses, which won't happen for a very, very long time. No way business is going to get rid of Microsoft any time soon as much as I would like to see otherwise... but the PC is the new typewriter... again. *ONLY* business people will use them... and then, only those who "work.")
This is why OS X market share is growing in percentage terms, when paired with "Expensive hardware", Windows is in decline, and Linux hasn't gotten anywhere on the desktop in the last 10 years despite being FREE.
Linux isn't getting anywhere on the desktop because for the average PC user, for desktop usage, the Linux desktop experience is still crap. Yes, it can do a million things other operating systems can't with the super tweak-able GUI. However it can't remain with the same UI paradigm for more than 5 years at a time, continually deprecates/breaks applications from release to release and doesn't have enough polished, high quality software available for non-nerd usage (graphics, video, music, etc).
I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
The Surface has a USB type-A port and acts as a USB host.
Power can only flow from the host to the device so you will never be able to charge the Surface through USB.
The story is titled Why Microsofts Surface Pro could fail; which implies that its failure is unlikely.
MicroSoft have had a decade of poorly received mobile computing devices.
The better, and unanswered question, is Why Microsofts Surface (pro?) could be a success. The field is already crowded with many competent options; and it seems unlikely that a MeToo that offers neither price, function or usability advantages will be appealing.
On the other hand, the cool character in Suburgatory likes it....
If you want a negative bent, lets try this:
The reason MicroSoft had to make the Surface was because they could not get the usual suspects to buy in. After having been burned by multiple generations of decent mobile devices laid to waste by the Windows Mobile experience, they collectively whispered: prove to us people will buy it, and we will make some.
This left a loose coalition of the co-erced (Samsung, Lenovo) and the desperate (Asus and Dell, who have been shooting up together in the alley) fielding devices, while the others stood buy and watched.
Yesterdays news: MicroSoft halves Surface RT production orders....
Summary failed to mention that the Surface Pro is much more expensive than a Raspberry Pi.
really? who gives a fuck?
I don't get it. Virtually every laptop or tablet has a choice of preconfigured, built-in amounts of RAM, flash memory, hard drive space. I realize the combinatorial issue, but why isn't a double-sized battery a user-configurable choice at purchase time? You can of course find all sorts of add-on third-party products but in general if you want 32 GB of flash memory in a tablet, you buy a tablet with 32 GB of flash memory preinstalled. You don't walk around with a USB stick or a compact flash card permanently poking out the side. Furthermore, how to say this except that users are willing to overpay for the convenience and security-blanket of preinstalled RAM and flash memory, so it could be a source of additional profit margin.
Why the reluctance to offer bigger batteries? Let the users who need longer runtimes buy longer runtimes, let the users who need lighter weight buy lighter weight. Is it fear that reviewers comparing competitive products would insist on citing the weight for comparable runtime instead of weight of the lightest unit?
"How to Do Nothing," kids activities, back in print!
ignore mystikkman he is a shill. if you read his latest comments you see he left more then 8 comments just on this story. why would someone care so much about a stupid /. story?
What market is there for a full blown laptop in tablet form factor. That's the original concern raised by the author. Seems like a small market. Esp when you have the power of a full blown desktop/server available on any tablet via remote connections and cloud services/apps.
My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
No, the reason Vista bombed was because Nvidia and ATI couldn't write a stable video card driver!
Sure, 10 hours is a stretch. I get that - sort of.
But I have an 11.6" acer i3 based laptop that gets 8 hours of light usage (the kind of usage that gets my iPad about 8-9 hours of use) on it's "internal" battery of 56 Wh. That laptop is 2 years old and cost me $350.
If MS can't dial in the battery life to show at least 7 hours on a charge, it really will die. It has everything I want - functional, if not perfect, keyboard, top notch screen, 300+ dpi / 1024+ level stylus input, and can run real programs. It's likely to replace both my laptop and tablet. But not if I have to recharge it more frequently than I have to pee.
The whole idea behind the Surface is portability, go anywhere, do anything. 4 Hours is, no questions asked, a deal killer.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
Why Windows 8 will fail...
Why Windows Phone 8 will fail...
Why Surface RT will fail...
Why Surface Pro will fail...
none
You need to understand that this is an intermediary device which runs x86 and newer metro applications together but does neither very well. It is a compromise. Clearly Microsoft is moving away from the former WINTEL platform and forcing new apps into the metro framework which will allow Microsoft applications to be sold through their store and run on low powered devices. The surface PRO is not the destination; it is just one step on the way to a Microsoft ecosystem that can compete with the other mobile platforms on ARM processors and the like. And once that transformation is complete, there will be longer battery life.
Reviewing the Surface RT? Point out how it isn't a laptop.
Reviewing the Surface Pro? Point out how it eats more power than tablets from years ago.
Why are we not shaming these article authors for their transparent bias?
StoneCypher is Full of BS
The first model of Surface Pro uses an Ivy Bridge chip. However, Haswell chips will be available in 2013. Intel claims that Haswell can "up to double" the battery life of a laptop. Intel must continue to improve battery life to compete against the ARM-based systems, and Haswell is a major step in doing so.
http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2012/09/intels-haswell-cpus-will-fit-in-everything-from-tablets-to-servers/
The reason Linux can't compete is that their core paradigm is "configure it yourself so it's exactly the way you want it", whereas real users don't want to have to configure anything and are more willing to settle for "it works like this, deal with it" as long as that ends up being "close enough".
HOW COULD IT NOT?
1) 900 Dollars
2) Hot, Power Sucking Intel Chip
3) Boots desktop OS with a BIOS
4) Consumes 32+ GB of storage with system binaries
5) The frequently-discussed "Win8 trainwreck" UI
6) Needs Forefront/Essentials/McAfee/Symantec-Norton/etc..
7) Steve Ballmer
"Flyin' in just a sweet place,
Never been known to fail..."
Why microsoft surface could succeed
Yes, and there's only like 20 business people in the world. Maybe 30. This product is doomed.
You DO realize that there is a market for "business people" who want more than just a cheap tablet, right? They'll get the Surface Pro.
And fo those who want a iPad-like device, but in the Windows system, there's the Surface.
-David
Okay, here's your article about why Linux failed on the desktop. Explanation is simple. Microsoft has had a powerful entrenched monopoly on the desktop.
Yep it was all MS not playing fair while their competition was GIVING THEIR PRODUCT AWAY.
It does not matter what anyone says the simple truth is life aint fair. You succeed or fail with what you have not with what is "fair". There is no "level" playing field. Your onesided fairytail about how evil MS is responsible for linux failure is like blaiming the ref for your teams loss. You can either learn and do better or be like my whiney little sister.
In areas where Microsoft does not have an entrenched monopoly, it does not know how to compete. Competition is not even in their DNA.
They are competing with Oracle... and we all know brother Larry is a saint who plays fair.
They are competing with webkit and firefox.
They are competing with google on search and "free" messaging.
They are competing on smartphones.
Furthermore, Microsoft has no vision. None. Zero. Every product from Microsoft has been copied from someone else, or acquired from someone else.
Welcome to the real world. It is a universal truth in business big fish eat the little fish.. and you know something most little fish are ecstatic to be aquired by big fish.
And now you have a better PC and a better tablet that can run any Windows app (via RDP), including Win8 apps, even from the MS store (ahem, if you find such an app that doesn't have a better version available in the Android store). And with the money left over, you could pay for your internet access for a couple of years!
Or forego the PC at home and use a cloud-based Windows desktop solution for a couple of bucks/month.
Heck, replace the Nexus 10 with an iPad, and it's STILL cheaper than a Surface Pro.
"Ahh! I see you're in that indeterminate Schrodinger state where - oh, uh
ignore mystikkman he is a shill. if you read his latest comments you see he left more then 8 comments just on this story. why would someone care so much about a stupid /. story?
LOL. My comment was modded down thought, a bit harsh..
Agreed, have Microsoft keyboards at home and work, love them. Not such a Windows fan. Microsoft should build on their strengths, and just build better keyboards than anyone; maybe integrate the processor into it. There's a precedent to live up to:
http://www.commodoreusa.net/cusa_c64.aspx
Another good reason PRO is likely to fail... I've said it before & I'll say it again. Surface is a cloud car.
If I need Intel horsepower on a tablet, I'll remote desktop into a real computer (or cloud-hosted VM). Why pay for Intel in a tablet when the RT version will provide excellent mobile functionality at significantly lower costs (in terms of both price AND power) with the ability to hook up to heavy iron to do the heavy lifting?
So if the the game is rigged, the field is not level, the ref is bribed, the scoreboard is rigged, etc, then you believe that is the fault of the team the game is rigged against. Got it. They should just stop whining and try harder. If they can't win in a rigged game, it's their own fault.
There is nothing unfair about giving your own work away for no ulterior motive. On the other hand, can you say Internet Explorer? IE was given away for only one reason -- in an attempt to monopolize the web so that it would be the Microsoft Web. It's also ironic that you complain that Linux is given away, which is somehow unfair, but then you complain that Linux failed on the desktop. Very amusing.
I love the general hypocrisy about giving a open source code away. On the one hand, it is said that the software isn't any good and therefore couldn't be sold. Yet when it wins, it is said that it has the unfair advantage of being free. Clearly nobody would buy bottled water when water is available for free.
But Microsoft is not winning. Or if it is (and sometimes even if it is losing) it must resort to dirty tricks. Example: Microsoft makes more on Android than on their own lousy product. Yet Microsoft had absolutely zero to do with Android. Android has absolutely zero code from Microsoft. While Microsoft is not alone in doing so, Microsoft is using dirty tricks in exploiting the broken patent system.
I live in the real world, thank you. Little fish would probably rather grow into big fish. If they know that they have absolutely no chance of that, then their second choice would be to be acquired by the big fish. That's like saying restaurant owners are ecstatic not to have their business burned down by the extortionist. Maybe so, but they probably would rather never have met the extortionist, or monopolist.
It is telling that you didn't refute my actual points.
1. Microsoft had entrenched monopoly on the desktop.
2. Software lock in phenomena is real and well known.
3. Microsoft does not know how to compete -- and win without using dirty tricks -- and sometimes even that isn't enough
4. Microsoft has no vision -- everything copied or acquired.
5. Linux rules the world everywhere but on the desktop.
You could argue with my last assertion that open source is always destined to win. That is not as clear. But it is much more clear now than it was ten years ago.
I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
There was one model in brown, and plenty of other colors. The brown model also actually sold pretty well; it turns out if you looked at it the impression that came to mind was leather, not feces, and some people liked that.
Apparently the color of one of the models is the easiest thing to mock about the Zune hardware. That's pretty sad.
There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
Honestly, I might get one of these things - assuming it can run Linux. GNOME 3 would have a touchscreen-based device on which it could really shine :)
We've seen dozens of articles on why various Surface branded products aren't going to make it in the marketplace.
I want to see an article "Why Surface Pro Might Not Fail". (But not written by Ballmer.)
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
But compare how many Xboxes were sold in 7 Years, against the number of iPad/iPhone Apple sells in a Quarter of a single Year, kinda redefines what "wildly popular" means.
No, the reason Vista bombed was because Nvidia and ATI couldn't write a stable video card driver!
You forgot the part ', because Microsoft changed up the Vista game very late in the product cycle.'
Accurate touch sensitive stylus is a killer feature, I'm going to get one just for this. Can be used for notes, drawings, like paper replacement (primary reason). With x86 windows compatibility comes software. I can even write my own :). It's not a replacement for a light book reader with long battery time, but it's a nice thing to have. Just need to scan my papers to keep all in one convenient form.
Like it's been said, it doesn't really matter that it's got low battery life for a tablet.
Reason being, it isn't really a tablet. It's a laptop/ultrabook that's disquised as a tablet with a touchscreen, etc.
The Surface Pro is a full computer, unlike the Surface, which isn't really a full anything...
Being a full computer, I can't see people using it that often without being plugged in anyway, much like the way people are with laptops these days.
I can't use a stylus on an air's screen.
And it can't run any of the software I've been using for the last decade.
Also, the air isn't a tablet. It's not even in the same category.
Why bother posting this?
5) Can run touch apps and browsing for couch use, although an additional cheap 7" tablet might be good for couch, bed and bathroom use.
That pretty much sums it up. The Surface Pro is usable as a tablet, but not really handy as one. Why not just buy a cheap laptop. It would be as powerful as the Surface, have much more storage, and the savings would pay for the Nexus 7 you admit you really ought to have for the times you really want a tablet.
Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
They don't seem to try to compete on any level.
- They don't compete with price (nobody is going to buy that when android tablets sell for $200)
- They don't compete on battery life
- They don't compete on features
I don't understand why they can't wake up and smell the coffee. They start out with good ideas, and then iteratively destroy them with bad ones.
Which cheap laptop has the features of Surface like 1080p screen, pen with active digitizer, SSD etc? Even if there is, it's not a full replacement for the use cases of Surface though.
The first reason it could fail is battery life? That's the first reason? I mean I could have seen because it is running Windows, the absurd price point or the poorly executed industrial design. Meaning battery life would be a close fourth... yet it gets put forth as the biggest reason. Let's be honest the surface was destined to fail so why is it any surprise that it's more expensive, less capable but we have to appease Intel cousin would fair any better.
I like my black mini-Zune. Things it can do that iPod can't? It has radio, I can sync music to it via WiFi, without having to unplug it from my entertainment center, I can play music from it on my Xbox, wirelessly, oh, and I can control volume and songs with my gloves on, or through the cloth of my pocket. It is an amazing piece of hardware, which was killed by elitist simpletons not willing to get past their Twitter-feed bias and actually try something everybody else doesn't want.
Bow before me, for I am root.
I picked up a Surface RT tablet when it first came out to see exactly how well of a laptop replacement it was (knowing its ARM and cannot run Windows apps - it was an actual egronomics, size, weight and all that test run for myself). I've owned an iPad, iPad2, Galaxy 10.1, Sony tablet (forgot the name I bought it for playing PSX games on it primarily but did this in Hong Kong and when I came back to the states I found to my horror it was region locked so I could not get the US PSX games on it >:O ) and the RT Tablet.
I am a travelling consultant and I have been lugging around laptops for 12 years across the US as I travel all around, so I know what its like to be on the go (FYI, the surface I dont even have to pull out and put in a bin because its considered an 'iPad' and they dont need to Xray it seperately, woooot!), blah blah blah. I've never jumped on the ultrabook bandwagon because their stupid small size is just retartded in my opinion, nor is their laptop frame just shrunken down severly. The RT tablet blows the freaking socks off of any of the previous tablets and ultrabook world when considering the usage of intending it to be a laptop replacement.
Obviously I cannot use it to replace my laptop yet as the RT and its ARM x86 applications limitations as I need full MS Office suite including Visio and a lot of my company's applications to do my job, so the RT went my woman where she uses the hell out of it. The RT tablet did allow me to watch movies on the 15 hour flight I recently did when going to Hong Kong for vacation with the defautl power policy setting. Of course I did not start watching from the moment the plane got lift, but I did watch it a hell of a lot and I still had battery to spare when I landed in HKG. Was completely not expecting it, so wicked suprise, now for the PRO and the tradeoff to actually run all our good 'ol Windows applications (say at least Win 7 level apps) that's a perfectly fine trade off for me, for battery life.
My current laptop may go about 3 hours of battery on it if I am lucky (Dell E6410) when I unplug it and lug it around with me to bed to watch movies and browse the Internet even, so I am already used to that as a user. The whole pull away keyboard and use strictly as a tablet device is super slick on the surface and just feels like it should of been like that all along. I used it when going to work as a trial run doing things I could do on it mainly (taking notes when I was attending a training class out in California) and it was perfect. It's a perfect size in my mind, not to small to be annoying like an ultrabook, and not too big to be just a freaking laptop. So its actually comfortable to use in a plane, a desk, in bed etc.
I got wicked attached to the egronimcs of the surface, and what I need is just the ability to install my own Windows 7 software (Visio 2010, Office 2010, a bunch of software like VMware vSphere client, etc) and I am freaking golden. I personally hate Windows 8 FOR PC's. I am not a fan of a metro UI on a freaking desktop, to me it is just retarded, I should not be expected to touch a dang PC monitor which requires me to constantly raise my arm and poke the screen where a dang mouse to use is MUCH more comfortable and less effort as a whole. So lets get that clear, I'm not a fan of Metro on a PC. BUT, with that said, on the surface, it's a complete home run, and it feels native to me to have Metro as your primary entry point, then I just kick over to the desktop alot. With the Pro I will be treating it exactly like a laptop, and come on, the freaking ability to connect all my USB devices to it and have them run is something not a lot of the big tablets can compete with while running a native Windows OS. Sure some of your higher end android tablets have USB or other expansions, but hello, its android! I dont have my producitivty apps I can use, that's just a niche. I want my damn work apps running on it with the same form factor! And bluetooth for a mouse, or good 'ol USB mouse it, its now officially a lapt
what about the bootloader? a locked one is automatically a no-buy...
Obviously, But my primary point is that the cheap laptop is not a full replacement for the 7" tablet. That's why you buy the tablet in addition to the cheap laptop - or better yet, a cheap desktop with a cheap big monitor and mouse. Just because it's now possible to do all possible things with a Surface Pro, doesn't make it desirable. I'd rather do software development on a desktop system any day, with a real keyboard and mouse. If I need to travel with my dev system, then okay, I'll compromise and make it a laptop - though that's less than ideal for development. But I see no scenario where it makes sense for my dev system to be a tablet. As the original comment conceded, a Nexus 7 makes more sense for couch browsing, or even email when travelling. It's cheap and portable with good battery life - and that's what a tablet should be. The Surface Pro remains an impressive piece of hardware that has very little reason to exist.
Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
Troll, user of multiple registered accounts on /. to mod himself up with an his detractors down with, and *NIX promoter (yes, everyone's onto your little tricks), as well as an asshole.
What matters is you run from his points. He shut you up easily.
I both appreciate the tablet form factor and expect to need to continue to use legacy desktop apps designed for keyboard-and-mouse Windows-before-8, so in theory I'd be part of what you see as the market sustaining Windows 8 x86 tablets. OTOH, I have zero interest in a Windows tablet (whether Windows 8 or otherwise) -- because I'm not interested in using a tablet to run legacy apps designed for a desktop UI, and I'm not interested in sacrificing the usefulness of a tablet for extended away-from-power use so that I can use the tablet for legacy apps. Just because I appreciate the utility of a road vehicle for travel and I'd like to have a home to live in doesn't mean I'm part of the market for RVs that can serve both roles, but neither purpose as well as something dedicated to that one purpose.
The Surface Pro is going to be an absolute flop. Half the battery life? Complete non starter. My wife has an iPad and that sucker runs all day long on a single charge. What's the point of having a tablet if you have to run around looking for a plug? $899 for the 64GB version? I could get a Samsung Galaxy Note (very nice tablet with full annotation via the pen input) for a little over half the price. Then there is the $149 keyboard. I can buy a Bluetooth keyboard for any iPad or Android tablet for less than $50.
The only chance Microsoft had was to do what Samsung and Google have done - make a quality tablet for less than an iPad costs. Samsung has even gone a step further and offers features that the iPad doesn't have. There is a nifty application that comes with the 7 inch model that allows you to use it as a TV remote. It will control your stereo, DirecTV box..everything. Very cool app...and I picked it up for $179.
Microsoft on the other hand offers up this bloated, expensive slab. It's the modern day Edsel. Surface Pro...coming to a landfill near you.
They should be comparing it against other Tablet PCs for specs. Look at the Fujitsu or Toshiba tablet PCs (laptops) or a more similar comparison is the Samsung Slate 7. Also keep in mind I paid $1100 for my slate 7 a few months ago, where as the same spec MS Surface Pro comes in a couple hundred less. Also 64GB is just fine for a SSD. I have been tempted to break the slate 7 open and drop a 128GB SSD and redo it, but so far I haven't needed to. These tablets are meant to be just like other PC tablets. They aren't your usual browse the web, check email and play angry birds tablets. I have mine loaded up with NI Traktor Pro and use it as a nice portable DJ platform. It also works well with several graphics programs on the desktop for photo editing and is powerful enough to do some video editing as well. The dock for them makes it nice as a media center for plugging into a TV and it's great for travel when I have a work laptop and want a personal PC with me. For those who actually like full PCs, but also want the fun of a tablet interface, it's a good buy. So it's hard to compare it with an iPad since it's not an iPad, it's a touchscreen PC thats portable... They will always have a market for those who want a tablet, but don't want to give up the capabilities of their laptop. I use a keyboard and mouse when it's docked, but it's nice to have the tablet when flying all over the world for work.
Linux fails to gain traction in the desktop market and it's Microsoft's fault for having a monopoly.
You're predicting Microsoft will fail in a market fairly dominated by an Apple monopoly and they are failing because they suck?
Cool.
The Galaxy Note 10.1 has a 10.1" display.
That's why they call it the Galaxy Note 10.1.
Shees that's why the MicroFans think the Surface is innovative -- they have no idea what the status of modern tech is.