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Microsoft offers Surface-as-a-Service from its own stores (pay-by-month Surface tablets)
The Register ^ | Jun 10, 2016 | Simon Sharwood

Posted on 06/10/2016 12:42:37 PM PDT by dayglored

Typoslab gains pay-by-the-month option, with bundled support and training

First Microsoft turned Office into software-as-a-service. It's currently transforming Windows into Windows-as-a-service. And now it's decided that its Surface Pro typoslab should become Surface-as-a-service, to help businesses buy more of the hybrid machines.

Surface-as-a-Service, or "Surface Membership" to use its proper name, lets you choose from Surface Book, Surface Pro 4 and Surface 4 hardware. An online configurator lets you design the machines you want (complete with keyboards and pens) and choose a 18, 24 or 30 month membership plan.

Joining the club also gets you Microsoft's Complete for Business Extended Service Plan with Accidental Damage Protection, complete with three or four years accidental damage protection that sees Microsoft sort you out if you drop a Surface device or spill liquids on it.

Members also get phone support, “One-on-one personal training” in Microsoft stores and are promised “In-store discounts on future purchases of hardware, software, and more”.

Microsoft stores are hard to find outside the USA, so the Memberships are only on offer there for the time being. But Microsoft keeps making noises about wanting more stores in more places, so this store-centric membership plan has the potential to expand.

PC-makers are reportedly less than thrilled that Microsoft has gone head to head with them by making hardware. With Surface Membership, Redmond is now having a go at the leasing programs that some use as a way to milk a little extra coin from customers. In a shrinking PC market, it seems it is every manufacturer for themselves.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Computers/Internet; Hobbies
KEYWORDS: microsoft; microsoftwindows; surface; windows; windowspinglist
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To: GingisK
The idea was to destroy the drive’s content

Yes, but since the computer is a lease, the drive is supposed to still be useable.
21 posted on 06/10/2016 4:30:08 PM PDT by Dr. Sivana ("There is no limit to the amount of good you can do if you don't care who gets the credit."-R.Reagan)
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To: Dr. Sivana

Details, details. It would certainly be returned because the storage device went bonkers.


22 posted on 06/10/2016 4:31:27 PM PDT by GingisK
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To: dayglored

Debug was not an issue with megabyte drives, but for gigabyte and terabyte drives,.....


23 posted on 06/10/2016 4:48:18 PM PDT by SgtHooper (If you remember the 60's, YOU WEREN'T THERE!)
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To: SgtHooper
> Debug was not an issue with megabyte drives, but for gigabyte and terabyte drives,.....

My early hard drives were half-height 5-1/4" 20MB MFMs, with an ISA controller card of course. By 1989 I had a 100MB drive. But it wasn't until around 1991 that I bought a 500MB full-height SCSI drive (Avid), my first drive that didn't come with a bad-sector map on a piece of paper.

That 1/2-GB drive cost me $1600 in 1991 dollars.

24 posted on 06/10/2016 9:09:30 PM PDT by dayglored ("Listen. Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.")
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To: dayglored

I bought that model for $550 with the extended warrantee, tech support, and spill/drop insurance. That seems a better deal than leasing.


25 posted on 06/11/2016 8:02:09 AM PDT by Excellence (Marine mom since April 11, 2014)
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