The Windows 8 launch today seemed designed to put to rest any rumors
that Microsoft is running away from the PC. Instead a parade of
executives made the case that Windows 8 is the foundation for the "best
PCs ever made"--ones designed to work as both laptops and tablets, and
for both work and play. The purpose of the event was really to launch several products. New
Windows 8 devices and software upgrades go on sale at 12:01 am local
time tomorrow. The Windows Store--the app store, not the Microsoft
retail stores--is also officially open for business. And Microsoft and
its hardware partners will also begin selling Windows RT devices at the
same time.
CEO Steve Ballmer said that there were 670 million existing Windows 7
PCs "just waiting to be upgraded" and he cited estimates that another
400 million Windows 8 PCs will be sold each year. And Steve Sinfosky,
the head of the Windows and Windows Live group, said the Windows Store
has more apps than any existing app store had at launch (though he did
not mention the company's stated goal of 10,000 apps at launch). There were few surprises at the launch, which was streamed live. Most
of the features of Windows 8, and the apps and services that are
currently available, are well-known at this point. I was surprised that the company didn't announce any additional big-names apps
coming to the Windows Store--perhaps that is coming over the next few
days--and I expected to hear more details on new services such as Xbox
Music. Instead Microsoft execs largely focused on new Windows 8
convertibles, laptops and desktops from their partners (they'll
apparently be talking about Microsoft's own Surface hardware in a later
session).
Sinofsky talked about some of the key improvements in Windows 8
including longer battery life, faster boot times, a smaller memory
footprint, and compatibility with existing Windows apps. He said that
around 1,000 new PC designs have already been certified for Windows 8.
He also talked a bit about Windows RT, noting that while it doesn’t run
legacy Windows apps, the experience and Windows 8-style apps will get
better over time through Windows Store updates and it already supports
some 420 million hardware peripherals. That's a competitive advantage
over IOS and Android tablets. Mike Angiulo, who is in charge of hardware and the PC ecosystem, and
Julie Larson-Green, the Vice President of Program Management for
Windows, demonstrated some of the basic features of Windows 8 and showed
off several Windows 8 PCs including laptops (Lenovo's ThinkPad X1
Carbon and the Acer Aspire S7-191), tablets and convertibles (the Lenovo
ThinkPad Tablet 2 and Dell XPS 12) and all-in-ones (the Dell XPS One
and Sony VAIO Tap 20). Angiulo said Windows 8 PCs with touchscreens will
start at $499. The pair also highlighted several Windows RT tablets
from tablets Asus, Dell, Lenovo, Samsung, and of course Microsoft.
Ballmer gave the big picture on Windows 8. He said that, for the
first time, Windows has "first-rate tablets," in addition to desktops
and laptops adding that touch "pushes the boundaries of what a PC really
is." He talked about the content and services that Microsoft is
developing around these devices including a new version of Office;
Internet Explorer 10; the Bing Apps (News, Finance, Travel, Maps,
Weather and Sports); SkyDrive; Skype; and the Xbox music, video and
games. Finally, he talked about how these Windows 8 services will work
with smartphones running Windows Phone 8, which the company is set to
announce on Monday (October 29).
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