Posted on 04/02/2013 6:57:09 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Microsoft is rumored to cut the price of Windows 8 for tablets by 35-40 percent, according to Topeka Capital analyst Brian White.
White is on a "China-Taiwan Technology Tour" talking to people in the industry.
Currently, according to White's source, the tablet price for Windows is the same as the desktop/laptop pricing.
If Microsoft is going to compete with Android, which is taking over the world, it needs to lower its price. Google's software is free. And it's just as good, if not better than, Windows on a tablet.
Since consumers aren't clamoring to buy Windows-based tablets, there's little reason for a manufacturer to offer a premium priced tablet from Microsoft.
(Excerpt) Read more at businessinsider.com ...
roger that. It is an absolute horrible desktop environment. If one was trying to create the most unintuitive, clunky, distracting, nightmarish, destop experience possible they could not come up with a better suited product than Windows 8. Perhaps this is only true for longtime windows uses like myself who are very adept with their traditional product. Maybe the younger generation brought up on cellphones and tablets don't feel the same ways. But I bet those guys are the ones reponsible for mass business purchases and trying to get work done in a business . Windnows 8 has me seriously considering just going over to Apple or possibly Linux for everything from here on out.
the win 8 pro surface is listed as running full aps.
you must be thinking win 8 “RT” which was limited and pointless.
Spoken like a person who is simply trying to justify their hate/fear of change. Just because it has a bit of a learning curve doesn't mean the changes are "ridiculous". Most can be attributed to "Operator Error".
Windows 7 (home or pro, not basic) is superior to all it's predecessors in every way. The first thing I noticed in Win7 over Vista and XP was how much simpler connecting to WiFi was in terms of how many steps. Searching was another major plus. Vista tried to implement it but it hogged so many resources, it was no better than bloatware like Google Desktop. Win7 finally fixed that. If I have a dozen documents in my computer somewhere with the phrase "business meeting" in the file name or in the document, I can type that in the search and it pulls up in seconds. Try that in XP and tell me that XP or earlier was better.
That being said, I feel Windows seems to follow in a similar pattern as the Star Trek Movies (odd/even rule).
Our offices are still messing around with Win8 before we make our opinions for the office. It is efficient and smooth running, we will give it that. The problem is in it forcing the Metro Desktop on Desktops and Laptops that have no touch capability. I think MS pushed that a little too quickly. That's one thing I'll give Apple more credit on, they at least kept their workstation and mobile OS's separate. Similar maybe, but clearly separate.
ME wasn’t 4, 95 was 4. They’re just making up numbers at this point because there’s no way 8 is 8. ME was 5 (98 was a point release). XP was 6. Vista was 7. 7 was a point release, 7.5.
I liked the old parody ad that said that Microsoft was coming out with a new version of their software that combined the best of several builds: the best of NT, the best of ME, the best of CE - it was to be called Windows CEMENT - Hard as a brick and dumb as a clam!!!
Even MS admits that glitch has existed since VISTA.
And those ribbon menus. Whoever thought that was a good idea should be taken out an shot!
XP had buttons and links easily identifiable. Win7 links are a guessing game.
==
Change for the same of change IS ridiculous. Many of us use software for productivity, not for cutsie new features that actually hamper productivity.
The Ribbon Menus are part of MS Office, not Windows7, there’s no argument about those.
You can put Office 2003 or earlier on a Win7 machine and there won’t be any ribbons.
They'd have to pay me to use it. My time isn't free. I don't have the time to waste to make it 'safe' to use.
This penguin ain't playin
Actually, that is a good idea IMO. Active-x has been the primary vector for many viruses and trojans for many years.
I have the same likes and no likes.
“you must be thinking win 8 RT which was limited and pointless.”
No, I was referring to Win 8 Pro. That’s the one that runs Windows apps.
The article was referencing Win 8 RT, also called Surface. It doesn’t run Windows apps.
Windows 3.x, Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows ME were the last of the DOS based Windows operating systems.
The NT family of Windows went from NT 3.6, NT 4.0, Win2k (NT 5), Windows XP (NT 6), Windows 7 (NT 7), and lastly Windows 8 (NY 8?).
Windows NT started out as a joint venture with IBM whose early version was OS/2. The reason why everyone loved XP so much was it was really no longer Windows, but NT that looked like Windows 98 but ran like NT.
The more the better, we’ve suffered enough with the Winblows near monopoly on desktop.
You’re mixing apples and oranges. One group was DOS based windows and the other was NT. The current version numbers line up with NT. DOS based windows has been dead since ME.
RT is a waste of time and money.
Balmer is an utter moron for approving it.
Where MIcrosoft will win is when enterprises start replacing the Windows desktops and laptops with tablets.....but it will take a few years for them to begin reaping the benefits, but I do think as long as the tablets are compatible with the current desktop software, they will inevitably gain an advantage in the Enterprise tablet market.
Actually Windows NT started as version 3.1 and it even had OS/2 error messages. Windows 3.51 SP5 was the one that people had confidence in. Windows NT 4.0 looked exactly like Windows 95 which was based on DOS as was 98 & ME. Win2k came out with Active directory instead of the domain system and with AD and XP, you had pretty good control. XP put a prettier face on Windows 2000 Pro and gave us x64 support.
When was the time you saw a running netware box and they owned the server market NDS worked well if you knew it and kept it patched but their TCP/IP stack was pretty worthless if I remember right in that it couldn’t handle NDS so you still needed IPX in the beginning.
I loved Netware but I saw where it was going.
I’ve probably got a couple 250 user Netware 3.x and 4.x server.exes and license disks somewhere that I got free at a conference.
I like Windows 7.0 64bit. I have no idea how ver8 is but it doesn’t sound worth going to and I’m going to have to reach across my keyboard to run a touchscreen, seriously? Please tell it still me it still supports a mouse.
Uh, you can’t do data entry on a tablet, so I suspect that the enterprises are buying them for other purposes, such as for example conducting meetings (a huge semi-secret market segment, as corporate managers live and breathe meetings and just love to show off, so that tablets, like RIM phones before them, become status symbols and power accessories like pink neckties!)
The funny thing is I went to the command line and did a VER on Windows 7 and realized it is major version 6.1.7xxxx. So I am off as well. Either it is a major dot upgrade to XP, or XP was a major dot upgrade to Win2K. Seems I lost track along the way was well.
What the hell, it does say that for Win7. I’m pretty sure we can safely assume Microsoft no longer cares. I’ve got Vista on a laptop somewhere and I’ll do a ver on it to see what it says.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.