Expert says Microsoft Surface display isn’t sharper than the iPad

A display expert has refuted Microsoft’s claim that the Surface RT display is sharper than the iPad. This denouncement comes after Raymond Soneira, President of DisplayMate Technologies, compared the technology used by the two devices. According to him, it is “very unlikely that [the Surface] will turn out to be visually sharper than the new iPad 3.”

The comparison was made using an Asus netbook that uses a ClearType 768p display, which Soneira feels is comparable to the upcoming Surface’s display, and the iPad 2 and 3. The results? The Windows ClearType display in the netbook was “significantly sharper” than the iPad 2′s display, but “significantly less sharp” than the iPad 3′s.

The comparison was performed by displaying the New York Times website on the iPad 2, iPad 3, and Asus netbook. The text on each display was then compared and contrasted. Each display had the same height, reducing any edge one display may have had over another. Soneira acknowledged that the Surface’s display could end up being sharper than the Asus display used in the comparison.

Microsoft’s ClearType display utilizes sub-pixel rendering, while the iPad display uses standard pixel rendering. Says Soneira, red, green, and blue pixels are treated as independent image elements in sub-pixel rendering, rather than being smooshed together into specific pixels in standard rendering. Sub-pixel rendering can “make the screen appear to have up to 3 times the resolution” in comparison with standard rendering.

This comes after a claim by Microsoft engineer Steven Bathiche that the Surface RT’s display, which has a 148ppi 1366×768 display, is sharper than the iPad 3′s 264ppi 2048×1536 display. Said Bathiche, “Doing a side by side with the new iPad in a consistently lit room, we have had many people see more detail on Surface RT than on the iPad with more resolution.” While Soneira doubts that the Surface RT’s display will trump the iPad 3, he says that the Surface Pro, with a 208ppi 1920×1080 ClearType display, might have a shot.

[via Apple Insider]


Expert says Microsoft Surface display isn’t sharper than the iPad is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Microsoft training staff on the differences between Windows 8 and RT

There’s been some confusion floating about regarding the operating system on Microsoft’s Surface device, of which the $499 version running RT has sold out on pre-sale already. What’s that, you ask? Windows RT? Doesn’t Surface run Windows 8? Yes and no. Microsoft has started training employees on the difference between the two, but many consumers are still confused.

The current version of Surface runs Windows RT, which is a version of ARM-optimized Windows 8 that has been stripped down, and is not compatible with older Windows programs. A version of the Surface tablet that runs Windows 8 and Windows 8 Pro will be released in the relatively near future, and will be compatible with current Windows software. As you can imagine, this is a huge deal for the average consumer, who will likely look at the Surface tablet, see a Metro screen that looks like Windows 8, and assume that their favorite programs from yester-year will run on the device.

In a statement Microsoft gave CNET, the company said: “We are working to ensure our store teams provide a great experience to our customers purchasing Surface or a new Windows 8 PC…by GA, store associates on average will have completed more than 15 hours of training on Windows and Surface.” To further help consumers, Microsoft also has a “Help Me Choose” page on its Surface website, which explains that Windows RT works exclusively with Windows Store apps.

Still, the average consumer is going to assume by default that Surface is running the same Windows they’ve known their whole computing life, and that it will run the software they already use. Unless Microsoft highlights the differences between RT and 8 in a way that is both front-and-center and easy enough for the non-tech public to grasp, it risks having a lot of disappointed buyers whose enthusiasm for the new gadget turns sour as they realize that it’s not all they were hoping. This could then have a big impact on the success of the Surface Pro, which actually will run Windows 8.

[via CNET]


Microsoft training staff on the differences between Windows 8 and RT is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Microsoft sells out of $499 Surface RT pre-orders

Microsoft’s Surface tablet has generated a massive buzz over the last few weeks, culminating in the lowest priced option, the $499 32GB tablet sans-cover, having already sold out in pre-orders. The device was opened to pre-orders yesterday, and is now backordered by three weeks. For now, the other two models are available for shipping on October 26th.

At first glance, this is a bit of a head-scratcher. The $499 model Surface doesn’t include the cover, which is a pressure sensitive keyboard that doubles as a trackpad. This essentially means that a whole lot of buyers purchased a rather expensive tablet running Windows RT, missing out on half of the Surface experience. It’s worth noting that the next model up includes a black cover, so it’s possible that many buyers elected to buy a different color cover separately. We also don’t know what Microsoft’s initial supply numbers were, throwing a variable into the mix.

The $599 Surface RT has 32GB of internal storage space, and includes a black cover. The $699 model features 64GB of internal storage sapce, and also includes a black cover. For those who want something a bit more colorful, a type cover can be purchased separately for $129.99 in blue, pink, or red. A white touch cover can be purchased for $119.99. The type cover resembles a normal laptop keyboard, and includes a full set of function keys.

Microsoft declined to offer specifics. When asked about the number of units sold, the spokesperson said, “No numbers to share, the $499 one is now on back order so that means the SKU is out but all three SKUs will be ready for launch day.” While time will tell whether the Surface ends up being a hit for Microsoft, it certainly is off to a good start.

[via Computer World]


Microsoft sells out of $499 Surface RT pre-orders is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


New Surface video released shows off cool features

On Monday, Microsoft kicked off its marketing campaign for the Surface with the dance-heavy video “The Surface Movement.” This evening, a new Surface marketing video has been released, which shows off the Surface’s cool features, offering a nice look at the cover/keyboard in particular. Microsoft is dropping $400 million on marketing the Surface.

Surface measures in at 9.3mm thick, which, you can see from the video below, is pretty thin. The device features one USB port, and has a 10.6″ ClearType display. The detachable cover is a mere 3mm thick, and is pressure sensitive with low-profile keys, doubling as a trackpad. It runs Windows RT. Check out The Tao of the Surface for more info.

The Surface went up for pre-order on October 16th, and is available from $499, which makes it pretty stiff competition for the same-priced 16GB iPad. The $499 version features 32GB of storage, and does not include the cover. The price jumps to $599 if you get it with the Touch Cover. The last option comes in at $699, and offers 64GB of storage with a black Touch Cover. The covers can also be purchased separately for $119.99, and are offered in five different colors: blue, red, white, black, and pink.

The Surface is set to launch on October 26th with the release of Windows 8, with a Surface Pro slated for released “about three months” after the initial Surface launch, according to Microsoft executives, which will put it in early 2013. As things keep amping up, more videos like this one are sure to surface. No pun intended.


New Surface video released shows off cool features is written by Brittany Hillen & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Why do we care about the iPad mini?

Not as big as the new iPad; not as small as the iPhone 5 or iPod touch; it’s Apple’s own “tweener” and by all rights and intents the iPad mini should be nothing more than a gap filler. Yet anticipation is high for the presumed 7.85-inch iOS tablet, and while spirits always tend to get, well, spirited in advance of an Apple event, sometimes the justification seems more inexplicable than others. Arguably, in the context of the tablet market – and post-PC computing as a whole – Microsoft’s Surface is far, far more important than the iPad mini.

Windows 8 is the centerpiece of Microsoft’s next-gen OS strategy – the hub of desktop and mobile computing, as well as pulling together Windows Phone 8 and Xbox gaming – and the company’s future as an industry heavyweight is dependent on it getting that right. That also means showing how Windows RT – as on the first Surface model – fits into that equation, something so far we’re yet to see summed up in a consistent, easily communicated message.

As Microsoft’s Surface chiefs pointed out, though, their tablet project approaches slates from a different direction to others already in the market. Windows RT may be a pared-back version of Windows 8, but it’s still Windows-from-the-desktop boiled down into tablet form. In contrast, iOS on the iPad and Android on tablets running Google’s OS both take their cue from phones scaled up. What will be really interesting – and deserves attention – is seeing how full apps translate to finger-use and whether the detachable keyboard accessories Microsoft is so proud of turn out to be essential rather than just eye-catching.

With some calculated timing, though, Apple knocked Surface from the top of the headline pile: the preorder news had its few minutes of attention, only to be swallowed up by the invite for Apple’s event next week. Yet in comparison with Surface – which, for Microsoft is pivotal – an iPad mini would simply be filling in a line-up gap for Apple. So why all the attention?

“It’s iconic founder Steve Jobs who has to be disproved”

In no small part, it’s because the biggest challenge Apple has to overcome with the iPad mini is… Apple itself. More accurately, it’s iconic founder Steve Jobs who has to be disproved, after he so vocally and memorably blasted smaller-than-iPad models back in 2010. Tablets that size, Jobs pointed out, don’t just offer a slightly reduced display area of 9.7-inch iPad, but a considerably smaller touchscreen to play with. Vendors would need to supply sandpaper, he joked, so that users could file down their fingers in order to tap on-screen graphics with any degree of accuracy.

Jobs was undoubtedly a master of misdirection – telling you today that Apple had no intention of entering a segment, then launching a product to do just that tomorrow – but with his near-deification since his passing last year, and his comments on tablets still getting broadly circulated, all eyes will be on how Apple itself has addressed those complaints. If the iPad mini really is just a smaller iPad (which you may recall is, according to some, just a larger iPhone) then there’s a legitimate question of whether Jobs was actually talking codswallop back in 2010. Just as the iPod nano does its touchscreen interface differently to the iPod touch, taking into account the smaller display size, so Apple needs to demonstrate that there really was a challenge to overcome, and prove that it alone has addressed it.

Looking more broadly, though, all eyes are on the iPad mini because of doubts in the small tablet segment as a whole. When Steve Jobs roundly dismissed 7-inch “tweeners” as unnecessary and useless in the market, that’s because at the time they were pretty much pointless. 7-inch as a form-factor has, so far failed, unless it’s been cheap as chips like Google’s Nexus 7. That, with the heft of Google branding and a strongly competitive price – two Android tablets for the price of one iPad – has made the Nexus 7 the exception not the rule so far.

“Apple may have to compromise to make iPad mini a success”

Apple may have to compromise to make the iPad mini a success, and compromise is not something the company does all too often. Too ambitious, too whizz-bang, and the smaller iPad won’t be able to hit a competitive price point. Too humble, or built to too strict a budget, and it will lack the premium cachet the brand is known for. The smaller devices are, often the more complex they are to piece together – gathering the right blend of components for a tiny phone is more of a challenge than for a 10-inch tablet, where they may be a little extra wiggle room to play with.

The iPad mini lacks that room to wiggle, and the excitement around the product launch isn’t simply because lots of people want a smaller tablet (though some undoubtedly do) but because we want to see whether a firm with a track-record of convincing consumers it has solved the equation can do the same under arguably tougher constraints. The world may not need a “tweener” iPad, but if Apple decides that it range does, then it needs to demonstrate it can do it with more than just a bloated iPod touch or a shrunken new iPad.

SlashGear will be liveblogging the whole iPad mini event at live.slashgear.com from 10am PT on Tuesday, October 23; for more on Microsoft Surface, check out our behind-the-scenes tour with the Surface team.


Why do we care about the iPad mini? is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Surface team spills details: Xbox 360 controllers yes; USB-ethernet no

Microsoft’s Surface team has been busy wrapping the Windows RT tablet up for pre-orders opening this week, but it also found time to answer some user questions in a Reddit Ask Me Anything thread. In the sprawling conversation, team lead Panos Panay and his team confirmed that Xbox 360 controllers would work with the new slate – though that they hadn’t tried Kinect for Windows yet – as well as discussing just what “all day battery life” really means.

Microsoft is quoting eight hours of “mixed activity” from a full charge of Surface’s non-user-removable battery, or 7-15 days of idle. Asked what exactly comprises “mixed activity” the team confirmed it was more than just coaxing the longest – and probably misleading – runtime from the slate.

“We conducted testing across a variety of core scenarios such as local and streaming video playback (watching movies!), audio playback, wireless web browsing and productivity scenarios such as using Office and mail” hardware lead Pavan Davuluri wrote. “We tested using different Wi-Fi networks with pre-production hardware and software. Hence the battery life numbers started early in the program as a model with calculations and then get verified with actual device HW and SW.”

Other elements of hardware came in for questioning too, such as the internal storage supplied. Microsoft opted not to make a 16GB entry-level model – the $499 that gets you a 16GB new iPad could buy you a 32GB Surface instead, albeit without one of the Touch Covers – instead choosing 32GB and 64GB tiers complete with a microSDXC card slot for adding to that. “After the OS, Office RT and a bunch of apps, you will still have more [than] 20GB” on a 32GB Surface, one team member confirmed, while memory cards are hot-swappable.

Peripherals like the Xbox 360 USB controllers have been tested, “and they work great” the Surface team insists, but some types of traditional Windows PC connectivity won’t be an option. “We are not offering an ethernet to USB bridge solution for wired scenarios” Davuluri confirmed, though the USB 2.0 port will support “millions of devices.”

There are plenty of other tidbits dotted through the thread, including a very in-depth discussion of why screen quality is about more than just hitting “Retina” resolution. For more on Microsoft’s Surface and its route from conception to market, check out our behind-the-scenes visit to Studio B where Microsoft designed it.


Microsoft Surface tablet details revealed

When it comes to the tablet market, right now it goes without saying that Apple’s iPad (and perhaps, the iPad mini that will be announced later this coming October 23rd) is the undisputed king of the hill, although there are pretenders to the throne from the Android camp which are best represented by Samsung. What happens when there is a third player in the tablet operating system, and that player goes by the name of Microsoft? We all know that Microsoft’s Windows 8 operating system is about to be released very, very soon, and along with it, their highly anticipated Microsoft Surface tablet that was specially designed to be the ultimate stage for Windows. More details on the Surface tablet has been revealed today, including pricing. Is it worth your hard earned money?

Basically, the Microsoft Surface which was unveiled all the way back in June this year, will come in two flavors – one with 32GB internal memory, while the other will have 64GB of internal storage space. The Surface with Windows RT will arrive to the masses in three different configurations, where a 32GB model costs $499 to directly challenge the iPad, a 32GB version that comes bundled with a black Touch Cover which will cost you an additional Benjamin on top of that, and a 64GB version that comes bundled with a black Touch Cover, where it will set you back by $699.

Not only that, Microsoft wants to make sure that the Surface gets off on the right footing, and to do so, they will introduce a range of accessories along with the Surface tablet, including Touch Covers in five more vibrant colors – black, white, magenta, cyan and red, which are priced at $119.99 a pop. Hey, if you know you are so going to get the Touch Cover in the first place, just pick up the bundle (if you don’t mind black, that is) and save $20 in the process. Out later this October 26th in North America, the Microsoft Surface tablet will also arrive in Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, Hong Kong, the United Kingdom via online sales channels.

Press Release
[ Microsoft Surface tablet details revealed copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]


Microsoft turns Surface tablet into a skateboard, Windows chief Steven Sinofsky takes it for a spin

Microsoft turns Surface tablet into a skateboard, Windows chief Steven Sinofsky takes it for a spin

Gorilla Glass 2 and a chassis forged from magnesium lend Microsoft’s Surface slates some durability, but the firm’s decided to prove just how tough its tablets are by turning one into a skateboard. The wheeled slice of Windows 8 is said to have been rolled out during a tour of Redmond’s Surface skunkworks, but Windows chief Steven Sinofksy couldn’t resist hopping on the board today and tweeting a pair of photos. You can pre-order your deck now, though something tells us this mod isn’t covered under Ballmer and Co.’s warranty.

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SlashGear Evening Wrap-Up: October 16, 2012

Welcome to Tuesday evening everyone. Today was a pretty big day as far as news goes, with Apple sending out invites to an upcoming event, which is where we’re assuming the company will announce the iPad Mini. Not one to be outdone, Microsoft finally gave us some substantial details on Surface today (including information on pre-orders), and Samsung was right there to put its line up of new Windows 8 PCs and tablets up for pre-order as well.


We heard that there could be as many as 24 different iPad Mini models when Apple finally gets around to revealing the device, and we got to see the insides of the new iPod Nano thanks a teardown from iFixit. Excited for the Padfone 2? If you are, you’ll be pleased to know that its tablet dock can stand up to some abuse. We found out that Intel’s Q3 profits were negatively influenced by slowing demand for PCs, and heard that the average screen size is on the rise for all types of devices except for “mobile PCs.”

A mysterious Texas Instruments-made chip was found lurking inside Apple’s Lightning cable today, and Verizon is catching some heat for monitoring user activity. PlayMG revealed a dedicated Android gaming device called the MG, and AVADirect put a number of Windows 8 PCs up for pre-order today. We heard that T-Mobile might be getting the iPhone 5 early next year, and were told that LTE customers in the US pay 10 times more than LTE customers in Sweden. If you’re a hardcore gamer, you might be pleased to find out that the rechargeable battery in the Wii U Pro controller could potentially last up to 80 hours on a single charge, and you also might want to check out this snazzy Black Ops II launch trailer.

Bethesda might be working on a new piece of Skyrim DLC called Dragonborn, and controversial company Foxconn admitted to hiring underage workers today. The Xbox 360 was given a new dashboard update, Beats Audio unveiled a new portable speaker that has been aptly named “The Pill,” and Boxee announced a new service called Boxee TV. Finally tonight, we have a review of the LG Optimus G and the Motorola DROID RAZR HD, both by Chris Burns, and Vincent Nguyen talks with Microsoft to get the inside scoop on what makes the Surface such a game-changer. That does it for tonight’s Evening Wrap-Up, enjoy the rest of your night!


SlashGear Evening Wrap-Up: October 16, 2012 is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Don’t Preorder Microsoft Surface [Microsoft Surface]

Microsoft’s Surface RT tablet is gorgeous. It’s innovative. It’s without exaggeration the most exciting new gadget to come along in years. And if you buy one today, you’re a fool. More »