Funny.
Here in the Seattle area...
I walk into Apple Stores, there are several "Geniuses" standing around ready to help me.. no lines, no crowds, no nothing.
Yeah, and surprisingly enough not a lot of people drink Pepsi in Atlanta!
Funny.
Here in the Seattle area...
I walk into Apple Stores, there are several "Geniuses" standing around ready to help me.. no lines, no crowds, no nothing.
That sounds high for the RT and low for the Pro. With that narrow a difference I don't see why many people would go for the RT over the far more capable Pro.
I still say the price points will be modeled on iPad/MBA. $500/$1000.
"Unnamed Sources" say that the Surface RT will start at $600 and the Pro will be at least $800 according to the DigiTimes. Link here via BGR.
Microsoft has to undercut iPad though. iPad is far too popular and desire to sell it at the same price. It isn't even a fair fight.Surface 32gb at $599 is the same as the iPad 32 gb and about as low as we could hope. $799 is $200 cheaper than I hoped so that would be a fantastic price.
16:10 is really the perfect aspect ratio for nearly all purposes. I wish apple adopted this ratio for the iPad, iPhone, Monitors and the upcoming Apple TV. One universal aspect ratio and just three resolutions for ALL Apple devices. 960x600 for iPhone. 1920x1200 for pretty much everything else. 2880x1800 for anything they want to brand as retina.
I find 16:9 aspect ratio is way too narrow. 4:3 is good vertically but looks off horizontally and it's not great for watching movies and not as universal.
Let's have this NOT be the beginning of us getting our MS rumors from Gruber. Deal?
I think they are missing the point when they say the Pro will be price-comparable with ultrabooks. Ultrabooks are NOT the competition, the MacBook Air is. That's the only price comparison they should be concerned with.I think...
499.99/599.99 for the two RT's
799.99/899.99 for the Pro's
Though, they said it will be priced like comparable ultrabooks, ultrabooks are hitting 699.99~800, and if I were them, I'd avoid breaking the 1000 barrier.
I think they are missing the point when they say the Pro will be price-comparable with ultrabooks. Ultrabooks are NOT the competition, the MacBook Air is. That's the only price comparison they should be concerned with.
I think they are missing the point when they say the Pro will be price-comparable with ultrabooks. Ultrabooks are NOT the competition, the MacBook Air is. That's the only price comparison they should be concerned with.
Only Mac fans would think that's the scenario. Real world marketing would put it in comparison with Windows running Ultrabooks.
You don't have to be a Mac fan to recognize the MBA as the product to beat in this category.Only Mac fans would think that's the scenario. Real world marketing would put it in comparison with Windows running Ultrabooks.
Microsoft has to undercut iPad though. iPad is far too popular and desire to sell it at the same price. It isn't even a fair fight.
You don't have to be a Mac fan to recognize the MBA as the product to beat in this category.
I'm really trying to break out of the tiresome defense force narrative but people keep dragging it back into the discussion.
The air is the best selling ultrabook and Microsoft is comparing the pro and pricing the pro like a ultrabook.MBA make up what percentage of the laptop/notebook market? There's no reason they have to recognize it as the product to beat.
MBA make up what percentage of the laptop/notebook market? There's no reason they have to recognize it as the product to beat.
Small Ultrabooks maybeUltrabooks = collateral damage in Microsoft's view, I suspect
MBA make up what percentage of the laptop/notebook market? There's no reason they have to recognize it as the product to beat.
Bit LTTP having only just seen the video. Well I can see why MS Surface (particularly the pro) would appeal to some people, but with no price, detailed specs or concrete delivery dates, the entire event is just a premature hype exercise imo, delivering very little other than perhaps achieving what I would call an applause ripple effect somewhat similar to those obvious plants that you see in the crowd at the E3 press conference.
Because when you come to think of it, without any concrete info to offer at the end of the day, the only sure thing MS has announced here is to tell their potential tablet OEM partners that theres a new cowboy in town - one with a competitive advantage who doesnt have to pay any Windows licensing fees and can potentially hurt their already slim margins. If thats not a big fuck you I dont know what is. Who is MS trying to fool here? Stretch these OEMs to the limit where they have to start pushing open-source solutions for real? Well if thats the case, Im all for it. Open source deserves a chance to shine.
Secondly the reveal has done very little to change my mind that Windows 8 is nothing but a cluster fuck of a mess for traditional desktops. No, I have no use for this Surface hybrid. Its a big meh to me. It aint gonna replace my multi monitor desktop setups at work or at home. Yes I do like the improvements under the hood for Windows 8 but that still does not compensate the overwhelming hate I have towards your blatant troll attempt of trying to turn my desktop into a giant smartphone! Metro is butt ugly and fucking hideous and I dont want to be exposed to it, not even for a fucking second on my desktop!
Youre fooling nobody with your one-size fits all form factors crap. I have no problem towards unification or convergence strategy for mobile devices and desktop counterparts. Thats not the issue. What I have a problem with, is your cuntish way of implementing it. The underlying code is already there to ensure that it works well for various form factors, so why not just limit the Metro UI to touch centric devices? Why not make it easy for users to flick a switch like a desktop mode, a tablet mode or a phone mode? Why not make it work like Windows media centre where we dont have to be exposed to it if we dont need to? How is Metro supposed to enhance my desktop experience or make me more productive?
Like I said youre fooling no one. Windows 8 merely a convenient pretext or excuse and your last ditch attempt at trying to shove your mobile UI in our face in the hopes that it translates into mass acceptance for your dying mobile devices. Only difference this time around is, instead of your strong-arm tactics with OEMs, youre also bringing your game to end consumers. To that, I still say a big fuck you MS.
They were 91% of PC's over $1000 in 2009 according to NPD.
He's talking about ultrabooks. The Air is both the most popular and the best reviewed and best performing/benchmarking Ultrabook. It's the one to beat.
That's all you think it takes to make it the one to beat?The new Asus Primes are the ones to beat in my eyes.
1080p on an 11" IPS screen is lovely.
What I don't understand about this announcement/product is why they built this, instead of a phone to show off.
OEMs are lining up around the corner to built RT and Pro tablets, but they only have FOUR mfgs as partners for their WP8 line.
What I don't understand about this announcement/product is why they built this, instead of a phone to show off.
OEMs are lining up around the corner to built RT and Pro tablets, but they only have FOUR mfgs as partners for their WP8 line.
Is that because you're in Microsoft Country?
That's all you think it takes to make it the one to beat?
I think that is all Macs in general. Apple has 91% of the 1000+ PC market in America. I wonder how many people here realize how just dominate Apple is in the computer market, not just iPad for the range the Pro is going to be in. Even in the 800+ range if by some miracle it is only 800.
I've been to the houston galleria a few times over the past year and the ms store was usually more busy than the apple store.... of couse 2 of those times was when that wp7 challenge thing was happening so that likely contributed.... was actually surprised the ms store was busier.
You're right, in terms of brand recognition and consumer appeal Apple and ASUS are pretty much in a dead heat.When everything else is pretty much the same, yes.
Did you watch the keynote?
What percentage of PCs are above $1000? And what is that quantity? And do these numbers include ones built custom? So would my desktop that I created for around $1100 from parts from Newegg be recognized by NPD?
This isn't a snarky comment. I really am curious.
You're right, in terms of brand recognition and consumer appeal Apple and ASUS are pretty much in a dead heat.
You're right, in terms of brand recognition and consumer appeal Apple and ASUS are pretty much in a dead heat.
The Apple logo on the back doesn't make a 768 x 1366 TN screen look any better to me.
When did he say anything about brand recognition? Why would a consumer use that as a relevant factor when choosing between products?
When did he say anything about brand recognition? Why would a consumer use that as a relevant factor when choosing between products?
Why would a consumer use that as a relevant factor when choosing between products?
Why would a consumer use that as a relevant factor when choosing between products?
What I don't understand about this announcement/product is why they built this, instead of a phone to show off.
OEMs are lining up around the corner to built RT and Pro tablets, but they only have FOUR mfgs as partners for their WP8 line.
People don't use brand recognition when choosing products?
MBA is the one to beat, part of the reason MS had to step in is because the OEMs (like Asus) are all over the place and don't seem to have any real direction in hardware. Those convertibles look simply awful to use.
I think there were two Windows RT devices from OEMs at Computex. One tegra tablet from Asus and a Qualcomm note-net-ultra-whateverbook from Toshiba.
No one wants to touch RT.
The Asus Transformer Book looks awful to use, but the Macbook Air doesnt?
what the hell?
Paul Thurrott says that the unveiling was basically a Potemkin Village of Surfaces:
The devices that Microsoft showed off earlier this week werent real; they were simply prototypes. And anyone claiming to have gotten hands-on time with a Surface tablet was exaggerating, at best: No one was allowed to touch a working prototype, so those typing videos occurred on dead pieces of hardware without a working screen.
Go back to the first sentence of this post to see who wrote that.
http://www.winsupersite.com/article...et-microsoft-takes-apple-mimics-google-143481
The Asus Transformer Book looks awful to use, but the Macbook Air doesnt?
what the hell?
When their goal is to let the world know they're a somebody as they sit at Starbucks watching videos of cats on their top of the line laptop.When did he say anything about brand recognition? Why would a consumer use that as a relevant factor when choosing between products?