Microsoft Surface Tablet announced

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The entry-level desktop Mac is $599, entry-level laptop $999. Doesn't seem steep to me for you what you get, considering they have the highest customer satisfaction and resale ratings of any computer product.
 
$599 does not include monitor, keyboard, and mouse. Granted you can get all 3 for $150, but the SFF desktop market is a niche in itself as most people would rather get a computer with all that stuff built in, called a notebook. Given that the ASP of an OS X machine is almost $1300, the mini is a non-factor.
 
You can use a keyboard with the iPad, they even used to sell an iPad-only keyboard.

Sure, but iOS will never have mouse/trackpad support, which will always be a disadvantage when you're trying to get work done.


Which airlines? I used to fly across the US constantly for about 7 years, and only Virgin America had outlets.

I've been on a few flights recently, and on a coach flight on United from LAX to EWR, there were outlets under every seat.
 
Which airlines? I used to fly across the US constantly for about 7 years, and only Virgin America had outlets.







Nevermind budget international airlines.






In any case, it's much more convenient to not have to worry about finding an outlet.

Continental/United now . Haven't had a problem . Mabye its the age of the air craft ?

The ones i've been on have 2 sets of seats in each row with the asile going down the middl. Its 3 seats on each side and 2 of the seats have outlets on the bottom of the chair
 
$599 does not include monitor, keyboard, and mouse. Granted you can get all 3 for $150, but the SFF desktop market is a niche in itself as most people would rather get a computer with all that stuff built in, called a notebook. Given that the ASP of an OS X machine is almost $1300, the mini is a non-factor.
You said entry price, the entry price of an OSX notebook is $999, and that comes with the best customer rating on the market. Yes, you can save money if you're not as concerned with quality, performance, support etc. I don't think that $999 is steep for what you get with the MacBook Air and seemingly neither do many others as it's the clear leader in its category, but I guess it's all relative.
 
You said entry price, the entry price of an OSX notebook is $999, and that comes with the best customer rating on the market. Yes, you can save money if you're not as concerned with quality, performance, support etc. I don't think that $999 is steep for what you get with the MacBook Air and seemingly neither do many others as it's the clear leader its category, but I guess it's all relative.
I also think it's $999 is not steep for what you get with the Air, but for every person who chooses the air, 10 other people choose a Windows PC for the average price of $491. Saving $500 will make someone overlook the many flaws of such machines. It's simple economics, far more people prefer not to spend that much money for a laptop, or they simply don't have that much money to spend on a laptop.
 
I also think it's $999 is not steep for what you get with the Air, but for every person who chooses the air, 10 other people choose a Windows PC for the average price of $491. Saving $500 will make someone overlook the many flaws of such machines. It's simple economics, far more people prefer not to spend that much money for a laptop, or they simply don't have that much money to spend on a laptop.
While I don't disagree, I guess this means the Surface Pro will also be stuck as a niche product because there is little chance of it being priced below $999.
 
As I said before, it's a better buy for 95% of the people out there compared to the pro.
How many people will find it a better buy than the iPad is still questionable.

The longer Win 8 in all its forms is out the more attractive the Surface RT will become. Apps will hit parity quickly when you have the installed base of phone/tablet/laptop/pc market .
 
The longer Win 8 in all its forms is out the more attractive the Surface RT will become. Apps will hit parity quickly when you have the installed base of phone/tablet/laptop/pc market .
Based on the reactions to Metro on Windows 8 for PC's and how most people don't want anything to do with it on the desktop, I doubt there will be many metro app sales to the desktop PC market, or at least not enough to catch up to the iPad "quickly".
 
Based on the reactions to Metro on Windows 8 for PC's and how most people don't want anything to do with it on the desktop, I doubt there will be many metro app sales to the desktop PC market, or at least not enough to catch up to the iPad "quickly".

Most people != tech enthusiasts. Most people have never heard of Windows 8 or Metro. I'm sure MS will launch a massive advertising campaign in the fall.

According to MS, 75% of Windows users run all of their programs fullscreen. They might enjoy using Metro.
 
This is fantastic. I've been stressing over moving from iPad 1 to iPad 3 for a while, but this addresses all the things I was considering waiting for and then some.

Day 1.
 
How did Microsoft keep Surface a secret for so long? There were rumours about a Microsoft Windows RT tablet on and off for months, but never with enough detail to make them credible.

Microsoft has a major manufacturing design setup in what it calls the Garage, full of 3D printers, injection moulding machines and computer-controlled laser cutters.
But that's not where it worked on the designs for Surface because it's far too public. Instead, the design team initially worked in what Stevie Bathiche, Microsoft's hardware maven, calls an underground bunker with no windows.

When the team outgrew that they moved above ground into a larger building; this one did have windows but it also had the kind of security you associate with bank vaults (or Microsoft's cloud data centres for services like Office 365, which have guards with guns and take biometric verification to get into).

Getting into the Surface building means going through airlock-style doors; the outer door has to close before you can get through the second door and go inside, so you know there's no-one sneaking in behind you.
http://www.techradar.com/news/mobil...icrosoft-kept-surface-tablet-a-secret-1086116
 
Quite steep:

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Apple happens to reap 90% all computer sales above $999 according to NPD (2009).

Let's switch the focus on that chart a bit: I actually would look at that average number for Windows PC's and get immensely sad. The figure is arguably that low for Windows PC's because of netbooks. Surface Pro is just in no way going to be able to fit within the average price range most Windows users expect their devices to cost. That figure also means Windows has an entire generation of users who use it on horribly underpowered computers: Consoles ain't killing PC gaming, it's PC's killing PC gaming.
 
Apple happens to reap 90% all computer sales above $999 according to NPD (2009).

Let's switch the focus on that chart a bit: I actually would look at that average number for Windows PC's and get immensely sad. The figure is arguably that low for Windows PC's because of netbooks. Surface Pro is just in no way going to be able to fit within the average price range most Windows users expect their devices to cost. That figure also means Windows has an entire generation of users who use it on horribly underpowered computers: Consoles ain't killing PC gaming, it's PC's killing PC gaming.
I guess about 90% of the people buying cheaper PC's aren't interested in gaming anyway. I don't see the problem. And if the device does what the user want, why pay more?
 
While I don't disagree, I guess this means the Surface Pro will also be stuck as a niche product because there is little chance of it being priced below $999.

It's going to be really interesting to read a good, thorough Surface Pro vs MacBook Air w/ Windows 8 comparative review once it's out. It'd be more interesting than plain Surface RT vs iPad.
 
I guess about 90% of the people buying cheaper PC's aren't interested in gaming anyway. I don't see the problem. And if the device does what the user want, why pay more?

Well, then one could make the argument that those PC users overlap with the same segment of people who also buy iPads/tablets. Since these people aren't buying PC's for Steam/gaming or Photoshop then Microsoft Office is the one distinctive factor left, I guess.
 
$599 is just a ridiculous price for the 32GB RT, considering the extremely low resolution of the display compared to the 32GB iPad 3 with the same price. I can still justify buying it due to the advantages it offers over the iPad but I don't reckon the consumers will think that way.
 
$599 is just a ridiculous price for the 32GB RT, considering the extremely low resolution of the display compared to the 32GB iPad 3 with the same price. I can still justify buying it due to the advantages it offers over the iPad but I don't reckon the consumers will think that way.

yeah, only 2 options come to mind with that price. The rumor is wrong or MS is pricing it higher to keep OEMs happy
 
like anything it will come down to a war of software and not just hardware, if Apple hired more software engineers I probably would have been working there years ago, but they have smaller software teams and more focused projects, where Microsoft has an army of software engineers in comparison. Microsoft has always had weaker focus on hardware but it grew with Xbox, had some growing pains with RRoD, now they are with backs against the wall because of how much Apple has tied up the supply chain and can price war the heck out of the market if they want to...but competition breeds great products!


It fails to stress the fact that 99.99999999999999% of people at Microsoft had no idea this was coming (even if it is kind of easy to guess about it from hints)
 
The pro will be a niche product at its price, the rt has to under-cut the iPad price wise to have an impact. Very few consumers would pick a RT over an iPad if they are at the same price or higher. Entry level iPad pricing is 399. MS has to beat that.
 
I can't see the RT version being $600, product would be dead on arrival at that price. It doesn't compare favorably to the iPad 3, let alone the inevitable iPad 4 that would be releasing just 3-4 months later.

Needs to be $399 (cheapest iPad) or $499, not a cent more.
 
I can't see the RT version being $600, product would be dead on arrival at that price. It doesn't compare favorably to the iPad 3, let alone the inevitable iPad 4 that would be releasing just 3-4 months later.

Needs to be $399 (cheapest iPad) or $499, not a cent more.

Even at 499 I see it being a very hard sell.
 
Came to post this, 5 mins too late! GAF is always quicker :P

Around £640 for the Pro model... I'd buy one for that I think.

It's not going to be £640. More like £999.

anyway, they should be aiming to undercut the iPad. $399 would've been perfect.
 
There's no way the Surface is going to be $399. Not with 32GB of storage and that build quality.
iPad does it with their build quality. Yes it's 16 gb vs 32 gb but the general regular consumer doesn't care about that, the 16 gb is the best selling iPad after all.

If you think there is a large market where people will pick windows RT over apple at the same price you are dreaming.

Google is going after the 200 range for the nexus tablet for a reason.
 
iPad does it with their build quality. Yes it's 16 gb vs 32 gb but the general regular consumer doesn't care about that, the 16 gb is the best selling iPad after all.

I'd be ok with a 16gb model. I mean, my phone only has 8gb and I don't even use most of that. I'm guessing most people have another computer that holds their media or they're using a cloud service.

They should at least offer a cheaper version, if nothing else it helps your marketing department when they can say "starting from $399".
 
I'd be ok with a 16gb model. I mean, my phone only has 8gb and I don't even use most of that. I'm guessing most people have another computer that holds their media or they're using a cloud service.

They should at least offer a cheaper version, if nothing else it helps your marketing department when they can say "starting from $399".
16GB could work, particularly since there's a microSD slot.
 
I'd be ok with a 16gb model. I mean, my phone only has 8gb and I don't even use most of that. I'm guessing most people have another computer that holds their media or they're using a cloud service.

They should at least offer a cheaper version, if nothing else it helps your marketing department when they can say "starting from $399".
I was surprised they didn't do a 16 gb model. Seems like a no brainer for price marketing reasons.
 
I can't see the RT version being $600, product would be dead on arrival at that price. It doesn't compare favorably to the iPad 3, let alone the inevitable iPad 4 that would be releasing just 3-4 months later.

Needs to be $399 (cheapest iPad) or $499, not a cent more.

It absolutely does compare favorably to ipad but the 32 gig version. If they have a GOOD 1366x768 screen I don't think you will see too many complain about it next to the retina display because you will really have to squint to see pixels on either. Build quality otherwise will be as good as the ipad.

Then they see windows 8 (and more importantly office load up) and will see the difference in software imo. All they have to do is pin 2 apps side by side and that crowd will go nuts because they will think its real multitasking.

That said I still think it hits the $499 price point.
 
I was surprised they didn't do a 16 gb model. Seems like a no brainer for price marketing reasons.

they're probably expecting component prices to depress even further. SSDs have gone down roughly 40% over the last year, for instance.
 
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