
The coming release of Windows 8 tablets
With the coming release of Windows 8 tablets, Microsoft is looking to introduce a new form factor to the mass market. A tablet-laptop hybrid. Even though this has been done previously with products like the Asus Transformer Prime, certain issues have held back the form factor from as a matter of fact taking off.
The hardware is not the issue
The hardware is not the issue. Most, otherwise all reviews of the Transformer Prime, find the hardware to be fantastic, only to have the overall experience tainted by a lackluster operating system. This actually shouldn't surprise anyone. Android apps for tablets are not designed to work with keyboard and mouse. To tell the truth, it's left up to the OEM to integrate the functionality. The resulting inconsistency between apps and their functionality, breaks the entire idea of hybrid device. Windows 8 will solve all of this.
Microsoft has said many times over that all of the apps designed for Windows 8 are designed to work great with touch, and with keyboard and mouse. Now, I personally find the idea of having all of my content; documents, music, videos on my laptop and tablet to be an in the extreme powerful idea. This is why the Transformer originally in effect piqued our interest. When you want to play angry birds and veg out in bed, you can. When you have to get stuff done, you dock it and get a full office experience with mouse and keyboard. None of this Polaris office garbage.
This paired with the ability to properly manage all of your files within Windows Explorer; if pulled off properly by Microsoft, they've solved the problem of a tablet's capabilities being limited to consumption.
Now, like earlier said, this a perfect device, if Microsoft can pull it off. They all the same can. As an early adopter of Windows Phone, we've seen first hand the attention to detail Microsoft is able to push in a mobile operating system UI. Their authentically digital moto in effect shines through in Mango, with a clean, no cruft, in the extreme smooth and speedy experience.
For the first time since Apple originally introduced the iPhone in 2006, a product is looking to as a matter of fact innovate on tablet UI and touch screen navigation. Or rather than a grid of static icons on a huge display; live tiles, gestures, charms and app snapping, are looking to revolutionization touch UI as we know it.
Microsoft has actually done something incredible with Zune. Be it on the PC, xbox, or Windows Phone. Zune provides a beautiful UI unmatched by any of its competitors, paired with a fully integrated Zune Pass for all your devices. Providing unlimited access to music, streaming or downloaded, with the experience they provide, is the way music should be done. iTunes falls way short here. Forcing you to purchase single albums you have interest in heavily impedes music discovery and is reminiscent of flawed business models found in other industries today. Not to mention iTunes feels in the extreme bloated, seemingly running much of the same underlying code since it's original release in 2001.
If Microsoft can provide an xbox music experience in Windows 8 even remotely as good as they have with Zune, they've in effect got something here.
It's basic fact. People use multiple devices. Be it a friend's PC, work computer, phone, whatever, people aren't always on the same device. Skydrive in basic terms, is specifically what the name implies. A hard drive in the cloud. You can store your videos, pictures, music, documents all in one place, and have them be accessible from anywhere. Although Windows 7 does have some basic skydrive features, it leaves a lot to be desired as far integration goes. Windows Phone but has some in effect cool Skydrive features, just as automatic uploads to Skydrive when taking pictures and video. From what we've seen in the developer preview, Windows is taking big steps to bring Skydrive to the forefront of their operating system and when all is said and done get some mindshare to the product, as it truly is a fantastic, not to mention free service.
Lot to be seen as far as Windows 8 goes
There's a lot to be seen as far as Windows 8 goes, nevertheless for the reasons described, there's a lot of promise for Windows 8 to be an in the extreme successful operating system. To this day, we haven't seen a proper touch UI on a tablet, period. A grid of tiny icons on a very large screen is just not how a tablet UI should be done. It's great on a phone with a limited sized screen, yet a tablet is not a phone, in spite of it being touch. Apple is not as a matter of fact to blame. They've brought a revolutionary product to the market, and decided on the safe choice of following the UI cues from its in the extreme successful, smaller counterpart. This even though, to boot to the iPad selling extremely so then, has lead to lack of technology on Apple's part.
There needs to be research on tablets, because it's inevitably the future of computing. We need to see more swipes, gestures and innovative ways to navigate the OS and apps. Grids of small icons, tapping tiny navigation buttons on a huge display, is just not the answer. Apple's not doing it because they don't need to. Google's not doing it because in a lot of ways they tend to follow what Apple's doing. This is where Microsoft has to come in and innovate, and from what we've seen so far in Windows 8, they have in a lot of ways. From charms, swiping to show controls, to flicking through your active apps, this is the sort of research the tablet needs, and it looks like we'll when all is said and done being seeing it come to market with the release of Windows 8.
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