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George Ou

George Ou



Windows 8 Tablet Launch #Fail

Comments | George Ou, BYTE | January 02, 2013 08:45 AM

Category: Tablets, Smartphones, Notebooks

Most of the other Windows 8 tablets use more reliable micro-ribbon connections that maintain solid electrical connections even if the dock connector is pulled out most of the way. When I tested the Acer W510 Clover Trail Windows 8 tablet by lifting up and shaking the tablet with the dock attached, the keyboard and trackpad never lost connection. Yet the Acer W510 suffers from a buggy trackpad that won't reliably move the cursor left or right when the integrated button is depressed. It's unclear if the W510 trackpad issue can be resolved with a driver or firmware update. The Acer W510 also has a smaller netbook size keyboard because the tablet is only 10.1", and isn't optimal for serious typing. By comparison, the Samsung ATIV 500T tablet is 11.6".

The Asus VivoTab 11.6" Clover Trail tablet is another alternative but it sells at an unrealistic $799 price point which doesn't even come with the $199 keyboard and trackpad dock. Even the $499 to $599 price point of some Windows 8 Clover Trail tablets aren't competitively priced with the display and graphics they offer. Tablets with Wide-XGA (1366x768) resolution displays simply can't sell at the same price of an iPad 4 with a "Retina" (2048x1536) resolution display.

Samsung ATIV 500T dock

From a pricing perspective, Microsoft, Intel and the PC industry aren't even close to being competitive. While the Intel Clover Trail chip used in the Samsung ATIV 500T has the fastest CPU performance of any available tablet, the graphics (GPU) and display on any of the Windows 8 tablet is embarrassingly poor, especially when compared to the fourth generation iPad and Samsung Nexus 10 tablet. Despite these inferior specifications, the Samsung ATIV 500T costs nearly twice as much as the Android-based Samsung Nexus 10.

The PC industry seems to have this misguided notion that it doesn't need to compete on specs and price with the iPad 4 and Nexus 10. Graphics performance and display resolution have become the new megahertz and megapixel race in the iPad era and today's tablet buyers expect top level hardware at a $399 or $499 price point. It's shocking that Microsoft spent three years producing an antiquated overpriced product such as the Surface while Apple and Google, including their partners, are producing superior products in 6-month cycles.

Interestingly enough, many Microsoft fans started treating me like some sort of traitor when I criticized Microsoft Surface. But the truth is that Microsoft has betrayed PC users with inferior hardware and higher-than-Apple profit margins. This strategy didn't work for Microsoft in smartphones and it won't work for tablets. Windows Phone 7 failed to gain much ground because nobody got excited about an 800x480 resolution smartphone in an era of 1280x800 Android phones. Microsoft hopelessly chased Apple users who were loyal to Apple while PC users concerned with value and specifications jumped ship to Android. Surface and Windows 8 tablets also won't gain much traction when consumers can buy competing tablets with 3 to 4 times the display pixel count and faster graphics performance.

Does this mean I've given up all hope on Windows? No. Not yet. I still have a lot of Windows applications I love and depend on; but time is running out and the competition is only getting stronger. If there's any hope for Microsoft, they will have to eat this bitter pill and take my criticisms seriously.

Perhaps Microsoft should consider Google's Nexus strategy. Instead of Microsoft building its own hardware, it should have its partners bid on a flagship Windows 8 tablet along the lines of Google's Nexus 7 and Nexus 10 tablets. In exchange for good hardware at a competitive price point, the winning hardware partner would benefit from Microsoft's special logo and marketing. This won't result in Apple-like margins but at least it gives Microsoft a chance to stay relevant in the tablet space.

George Ou was a network engineer, CISSP security expert. He has been a technology writer for over ten years and recently worked in Washington DC as a think tank expert.



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