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#10
I would love to see MS come out with a Tabled VERSION of Windows 7, and take a leaf out of Android and Apple's books on the design of the GUI.
~Lordbob
MoreJuly 30, 2010 5:25 PM
Windows 7 Tablets: Just Say No, Microsoft
By Jeff Bertolucci, PC World
Microsoft is busy at work on a new tablet computer design, a product that may arrive from one or more of its hardware partners in "not a heck of a long time," CEO Steve Ballmer told analysts on Thursday.
With the early success of the Apple iPad--more than 3 million sales and counting--and a batch of Android tablets scheduled to arrive by the end of the year, Microsoft is coming to the party late. True, Redmond has toyed with tablet PCs for years, including long-forgotten experiments such as the Toshiba Portege M205-S810 laptop/slate hybrid, but it's still a no-show in the iPad era. This will soon change, however.
Desktop to Tablet
Unfortunately, Microsoft plans to retrofit Windows 7 to run on slates. While Win 7 is a fine operating system for conventional PCs, it was never designed for touch input, a shortcoming that makes it inherently clunky for the new breed of touchscreen tablets.
To be fair, Windows 7 does include Windows Touch, an interface overlay that allows you to use multitouch finger gestures--the flicks and taps familiar to smartphone users--on a Win 7 tablet. But touch input isn't a particularly efficient way to navigate the Windows UI, which was designed for mice and keyboards.
That is completely false and bogus.it was never designed for touch input, a shortcoming that makes it inherently clunky for the new breed of touchscreen tablets.
Way late.....even Kmart has an ipad clone available for $149. Not much but still an actual product.
Kmart Adds iPad-Like Android Tablet - 2010-07-30 19:09:55 | TWICE
All I can say is if Microsoft is going to get into this field it had better be D*** good and at a low, low price point otherwise its just another mega-million dollar failure.
I really, really want to believe that it will be a good must have product, but, as the owner of a new HTC touch pro2 windows mobile 6.5 phone that is NOT eligible to upgrade to windows phone 7 (still not commercially available I might add) I personally have my doubts. It's just about profits and not about the customer experience.
Come-on "Steven B".......surprise me, but, I bet you can't.
Edit: Wow- freaky when you post to one thread and it gets combined with another thread even as you post it......I've got a good case of whiplash now.
Exactly my thinking on the OS choice.
PParks, the whole reason behind that thinking is that, whether it is designed for it or not, Windows 7 would NOT be touch friendly on a small screen!
As mentioned in the article, look at the small sized buttons, text links, etc.
That is the reason I would rather see an OS DESIGNED for a tablet, NOT A PC.
~Lordbob
MS has has it's own Tablet PC editions for some time now. Touchscreen often depends on what a particular display supports especially if you follow some of the more recent tv shows where you see someone standing in front of a large projection screen when using that feature.
Cramped on a small screen you typically see the large square buttons displayed for menu options. The small keyboard buttons are not really any great deal larger then seen on most cell phones since everything has to be made compact. That's a large contrast between a 7.1" diagonal and a 19-24" desktop display not to mention applying touchscreen to a 40-50" lcd you mount on a wall.
The best term for the contrast would likely be "awkward" for TS in the present form of 7. 7 Tablet PC edition would be the thing needed and likely what MS is planning.
They wanted them to stand out. You're not using a mouse cursor but physically touching the screen itself. Liken that to what you see with touchscreen ATM machines or when some store or bank clerk swings a rouchscreen at you for entering something as well as confirmation wih the yes and no icons.
All that was geared originally for the larger screen displays seen in your typical conference room setting. From there you step down to laptops and desktops with touch supported monitors and finally down to Tablet. I suspect you wouldn't see any many options for DPI, resolution, icon sizing on a Tablet edition since that is somewhat apart from your typical desktop edition which sees all sorts of environments and screen sizes.