Microsoft Surface Tablet announced

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Windows is prone to viruses due to the fact that it is in most PC's, therefore it is targeted more. That being said I have never had anti virus and only got a virus once in16yrs and that was because my wife opened an unknown executive. I haven't had spyware since I got windows7. If you want to stay virus/spyware free on windows make programs ask for admin permission to install and use an updated browser its really that easy.

Bingo.
 
EDIT: Also, doesn't the newest iPad get hot easily? Maybe that would have came in handy.

The newest iPad gets hotter than the iPad 2....but doesn't get any hotter than other tablets. The iPad 2 was just better at heat management than the iPad 3 is.

iPad 2 > iPad 3 = All other tablets

...so no, unless you submit that all tablets on the market have a heat problem.
 
As someone very wise pointed out in some other thread, the system/console wars are like sports for people who don't like sports.

That's hilarious.

I'm interested to see where this new direction takes Microsoft. They've been trying to get into the tablet game since before tablets were what they are now and they might just be doing it right this time.

It seems that they're forcing the Metro UI on us so that we get used to the style and function operating systems are moving toward but removing the compatibility that people have come to expect from a Windows OS might be a mistake. It works great on tablets but many of us only use Windows on our PC because it's the easiest solution. I wonder if when the other OS options become more popular and accessible on a desktop computer people will move more toward something they know like Android (which can be run on x86) or something like that rather than learning the Metro UI just because it's Windows.

Could Windows 8 be the beginning of the end of Microsoft's hold on the PC OS market?
 
Windows is prone to viruses due to the fact that it is in most PC's, therefore it is targeted more. That being said I have never had anti virus and only got a virus once in16yrs and that was because my wife opened an unknown executive. I haven't had spyware since I got windows7. If you want to stay virus/spyware free on windows make programs ask for admin permission to install and use an updated browser its really that easy.

Yeah, its the un-savvy users or i'll informed that are at risk. Kinda like when people didn't know about viruses or bacteria and surgeons wouldn't wash their hands. If your smart you should drastically reduce your risk, and should be able to recover from just about anything.
 
The newest iPad gets hotter than the iPad 2....but doesn't get any hotter than other tablets. The iPad 2 was just better at heat management than the iPad 3 is.

iPad 2 > iPad 3 = All other tablets

...so no, unless you submit that all tablets on the market have a heat problem.

Then maybe they could use fans. I can't say because I never had one, but I would think keeping it cool should be semi-important.
 
Microsoft have to be very careful not to kill it off early on with pricing, it could end up happening through no real fault of their own, just struggling within the Apple dominated market. Sadly for them, as good as it looks, Apple are still the go to product for alot of people, especially when pricing in very much similar. They're going to have to put a hell of alot of money into promoting it and at least be cheaper than an iPad for the basic model.

The Pro model is very interesting, but again, I think they'll struggle to sell it mass market to people as anything other than a tablet with a keyboard, it's going to have to take a really great advertising campaign when it's potentially costing upwards of $1000. For people who are somewhat clued up to what it's offering, it sounds great so far, to someone walking into a store to buy one, MS just dont have the brand power to charge premium Apple prices.

Having said that, I do think it's a smart business plan to get more into hardware. Apple have proven that it's possible to make huge amounts of money doing it when you make the right business choices, it's just going to be very difficult to compete with Apple unless you're pricing the hardware at less, at least in the beginning. In terms of just the app marketplaces, people aren't going to jump to different platforms constantly when purchases are tied to each one, they'll need an incentive to do so.
 
The newest iPad gets hotter than the iPad 2....but doesn't get any hotter than other tablets. The iPad 2 was just better at heat management than the iPad 3 is.

iPad 2 > iPad 3 = All other tablets

...so no, unless you submit that all tablets on the market have a heat problem.

Uhhh, that's not really true. I don't think the ipad3 heat issue is an issue at all, I don't feel much of a difference when I use ours, but it is supposedly hotter than others:

qsrmZ.jpg
 
Then maybe they could use fans. I can't say because I never had one, but I would think keeping it cool should be semi-important.

I'd definitely prefer that the tablet didn't get warm after using it, but it's not like the iPad ever gets uncomfortable to use as a result of the increased warmth.

Basically I don't think the problem is so bad that it requires doing anything extra to fix it at the cost of either size/weight/cost/noise/whatever. If adding in the cooling comes free, then sure.

That the Pro needs a fan is a sign that those components aren't ready for prime-time in a tablet form-factor, to me. I say this not having touched or used the Surface Pro, obviously. Perhaps the fans are near silent, aren't adding any weight, heat isn't an issue...etc etc.
 
I'd definitely prefer that the tablet didn't get warm after using it, but it's not like the iPad ever gets uncomfortable to use as a result of the increased warmth.

Basically I don't think the problem is so bad that it requires doing anything extra to fix it at the cost of either size/weight/cost/noise/whatever. If adding in the cooling comes free, then sure.

That the Pro needs a fan is a sign that those components aren't ready for prime-time in a tablet form-factor, to me. I say this not having touched or used the Surface Pro, obviously. Perhaps the fans are near silent, aren't adding any weight, heat isn't an issue...etc etc.

Don't really agree with that, but like you said, we'll just have to wait and see.
 
Uhhh, that's not really true. I don't think the ipad3 heat issue is an issue at all, I don't feel much of a difference when I use ours, but it is supposedly hotter than others:

http://i.imgur.com/qsrmZ.jpg[IMG][/QUOTE]

I'm referring to the Consumer Reports article that initially was like "that thing will burn your face off!" and then the later retraction that said "yeah, but it's actually no worse than existing tablets".

I haven't seen a breakdown like what you're showing there, but even that breakout shows the various tablets getting up to around 98-100 degrees depending on what you're doing. All of them.
 
Microsoft have to be very careful not to kill it off early on with pricing, it could end up happening through no real fault of their own, just struggling within the Apple dominated market. Sadly for them, as good as it looks, Apple are still the go to product for alot of people, especially when pricing in very much similar. They're going to have to put a hell of alot of money into promoting it and at least be cheaper than an iPad for the basic model.

The Pro model is very interesting, but again, I think they'll struggle to sell it mass market to people as anything other than a tablet with a keyboard, it's going to have to take a really great advertising campaign when it's potentially costing upwards of $1000. For people who are somewhat clued up to what it's offering, it sounds great so far, to someone walking into a store to buy one, MS just dont have the brand power to charge premium Apple prices.

Having said that, I do think it's a smart business plan to get more into hardware. Apple have proven that it's possible to make huge amounts of money doing it when you make the right business choices, it's just going to be very difficult to compete with Apple unless you're pricing the hardware at less, at least in the beginning. In terms of just the app marketplaces, people aren't going to jump to different platforms constantly when purchases are tied to each one, they'll need an incentive to do so.

Apple has its hooks in a lot of people. They have money invested in the iOS environment and it has the already proven app store. Not to mention people have gravitated to apple only products. They have their iPhone, iPad and Macbooks. The Surface will primarily have to grab the attentions of people using android tablets or have yet to still convert. Other than technophiles that just have to get this, your typically soccer mom is not going to pick this up when apple gives her everything that she needs.
 
I'd definitely prefer that the tablet didn't get warm after using it, but it's not like the iPad ever gets uncomfortable to use as a result of the increased warmth.

Basically I don't think the problem is so bad that it requires doing anything extra to fix it at the cost of either size/weight/cost/noise/whatever. If adding in the cooling comes free, then sure.

That the Pro needs a fan is a sign that those components aren't ready for prime-time in a tablet form-factor, to me. I say this not having touched or used the Surface Pro, obviously. Perhaps the fans are near silent, aren't adding any weight, heat isn't an issue...etc etc.

Think of it more as a touch screen ultrabook or mac book air. All of those things have fans. The Pro is going to be more akin to those in terms of hardware and price than a regular "tablet".
 
I'm referring to the Consumer Reports article that initially was like "that thing will burn your face off!" and then the later retraction that said "yeah, but it's actually no worse than existing tablets".

I haven't seen a breakdown like what you're showing there, but even that breakout shows the various tablets getting up to around 98-100 degrees depending on what you're doing. All of them.

Yeah, like I said, it's an overblown issue. But its sort of disingenuous to lump every other tablet with the ipad3, when the transformer is closer to the ipad2.
 
Yeah, its the un-savvy users or i'll informed that are at risk. Kinda like when people didn't know about viruses or bacteria and surgeons wouldn't wash their hands. If your smart you should drastically reduce your risk, and should be able to recover from just about anything.

No kidding. The older generation in my family somehow gets infected all the time. They fall hard for the pop-ups that tell you that you have a virus etc. and/or the ads on facebook.
 
Wait the pro has a fan?! On a tablet???? Jesus jusr scrap this whole project now because that alone will make it look low rent next to an ipad

The Surface pro is quite a bit more powerful than an iPad. And by quite a bit i mean it's in a different league.
 
Then maybe they could use fans. I can't say because I never had one, but I would think keeping it cool should be semi-important.

The Pro version has vents around the whole perimeter of the device. Engadget actually the video up of the whole conference if anyone wants to watch. It has pictures of the vents and such.
 
Is it that hard to understand?
Computing device with ARM - no fan
Computing device with x86/x64 (intel) - fan

Doesn't matter if it's a tablet, phone, desktop, server, refrigerator, toaster. Same rules apply.
 
Microsoft have to be very careful not to kill it off early on with pricing, it could end up happening through no real fault of their own, just struggling within the Apple dominated market. Sadly for them, as good as it looks, Apple are still the go to product for alot of people, especially when pricing in very much similar. They're going to have to put a hell of alot of money into promoting it and at least be cheaper than an iPad for the basic model.

I very much suspect that 32GB RT model will come in well under the cheapest iPad. That will be Microsofts marketing strategy, or a large part of it. Just like they did with the 360, there will be a SKU that will be the cheapest in the bunch, and that model will carry the brand in sales.

edit. Has anyone had any discussions today about Apollo and Windows Phone 8 and how all of this will pan out? Isn't Apollo set to release this August/September? I could see myself in a world where my home PC is Win 8, my work machine is a Win 8 Pro Surface and my phone is a WP8, if (and only if) WP8 had functionality to seemlessly tie into the other OS's with ease, meaning I can jump from working in files/apps on any of these devices as a turn key type feature that is built right into the OS layer.

Anyone think thats a possibility?
 
The Pro version has vents around the whole perimeter of the device. Engadget actually the video up of the whole conference if anyone wants to watch. It has pictures of the vents and such.

Is it even noticeable though, or does it detract from the overall aesthetic value of it? Is it going to be distracting is the question to ask.
 
Don't really agree with that, but like you said, we'll just have to wait and see.

Fans in a tablet is a such a ridiculous idea. You want your tablet to be light, cool, quiet and discreet. Having a buzzing fan inside your inch think slab will be a horrible experience.

We don't need more moving parts inside something that cannot be easily opened for maintenance.
 
Fans in a tablet is a such a ridiculous idea. You want your tablet to be light, cool, quiet and discreet. Having a buzzing fan inside your inch think slab will be a horrible experience.

We don't need more moving parts inside something that cannot be easily opened for maintenance.

Well, it'll be cooler, so that's one off. For the rest, we have to wait and see if it's loud and heavy, or quiet and light.

Not really:
http://www.mobiletechworld.com/2012...-announced-the-ipad-killers-are-finally-here/

You can see the vents just under the kickstand bit. I assume that is them anyway.

Looks good to me.
 
Having a fan adds to the perceived fragility of a device and discourages users from moving it around too much. However, I predict we're about 2-3 years away from fanless non-atom x86 chips from intel.
 
Fans in a tablet is a such a ridiculous idea. You want your tablet to be light, cool, quiet and discreet. Having a buzzing fan inside your inch think slab will be a horrible experience.

We don't need more moving parts inside something that cannot be easily opened for maintenance.

A fan inside an intel-based tablet is necessary. Don't like fans? Get an ARM tablet instead. There's really no way around it (at least not with today's technology). The tablet form factor doesn't make x86 processors suddenly run cooler.

The fact that there is a choice is a good thing.
 
Having a fan adds to the perceived fragility of a device and discourages users from moving it around too much. However, I predict we're about 2-3 years away from fanless non-atom x86 chips from intel.

yeah, this is what I'm waiting for. The Surface Pro 2014/2015 assuming this becomes a strong SKU for microsoft should be amazing and provide me just what I want. In the mean time its all about them linux ultrabooks for me.
 
Having a fan adds to the perceived fragility of a device and discourages users from moving it around too much. However, I predict we're about 2-3 years away from fanless non-atom x86 chips from intel.

I do agree with this. While inevitable, it having moving fans is a big drawback to me personally.

I like the feel of an iPad because it's almost inert. It's a slab of steel/glass with no moving parts, no vents, no noise, no nothing, just content. I don't ever have to worry about dust getting inside or accidentally blocking the vents. It feels like a solid piece of aluminium.
 
I do agree with this. While inevitable, it having moving fans is a big drawback to me personally.

I like the feel of an iPad because it's almost inert. It's a slab of steel/glass with no moving parts, no vents, no noise, no nothing, just content. I don't ever have to worry about dust getting inside or accidentally blocking the vents. It feels like a solid piece of aluminium.

Welp, you can always go with the RT version which has no fans. Keep in mind your getting an i5 ivybridge in the pro version. It's obviously going to need fans
 
I do agree with this. While inevitable, it having moving fans is a big drawback to me personally.

I like the feel of an iPad because it's almost inert. It's a slab of steel/glass with no moving parts, no vents, no noise, no nothing, just content. I don't ever have to worry about dust getting inside or accidentally blocking the vents. It feels like a solid piece of aluminium.

The pro is trying to be an ultrabook or a MacBook air though instead of an iPad. Just with a slightly different form factor.
 
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