Microsoft’s Panos Panay says Surfaces with ‘multiple aspect ratios and sizes,’ LTE are on the way

It’s not the first time we’ve heard that Surface tablets would be coming in multiple sizes, but Microsoft’s Panos Panay offered the clearest indication yet that the line could soon be expanding at a Microsoft Store event in Seattle last night. As GeekWire reports, while Panay didn’t get too specific, he did say that Microsoft has “a lot of great things that we are thinking about and working on, and there are multiple aspect ratios and sizes and awesome things to come from Surface.” He further went on to confirm that an LTE version of the Surface 2 (but not the Surface Pro 2) would be heading to AT&T in the US and Vodafone in Europe early next year — something he first mentioned on Reddit last week — although he again held back on any more specific launch details.

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Via: The Verge

Source: GeekWire

Surface Pro team teases new accessories, explains battery life and storage

Surface Pro review lead

Now that the Surface Pro is a fait accompli, there’s more than a few questions circulating from prospective buyers. The project’s Panos Panay and his team have stepped up to answer them on Reddit, and they’ve shed some light on just about everything, including later plans. The Pro-specific connectors at the bottom? They’re for “future peripherals” that may require more power than the pogo pins do. The short battery life and limited free storage were also purposeful (if difficult) choices, Microsoft says. The company wanted to maximize performance while keeping the tablet reasonably slim, so it couldn’t rely on a big battery; it included the space-chewing recovery partition as it wanted to offer the “confidence” of a failsafe rather than leave customers to fend for themselves. While the answers won’t appease everyone, they at least put the design decisions in context. Hit the source link to sate your curiosity in full, or at least as far as an Ask Me Anything session allows.

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Via: The Verge (1), (2)

Source: Reddit

Microsoft Surface: inside the three-year secret project to build the first great Windows tablet

Microsoft Surface inside the threeyear secret project to build the first great Windows tablet

The scene: two dozen journalists file into a small auditorium on Microsoft’s Redmond campus. Steven Sinofsky, head of the Windows division, and Panos Panay, general manager of Surface, make their way on stage, each with a tablet in hand. In every audience seat, an elementary-school-style desk with a wrapped parcel placed on top. Inside: a Wonka bar, along with a golden ticket. It’s the day before Surface for Windows RT goes up for pre-order, and in addition to sharing some key pricing and availability details, the company is about to give these lucky reporters a tour of the proverbial chocolate factory, the halls where Surface was conceived and tested.

It’s an apt analogy, when you think about it: the company’s testing chambers and design studios are generally forbidden to people without corporate badges. Even then, relatively few Microsoft employees were aware of the Surface before it was announced to the public. On this day, we’re told we’ll be turned into giant blueberries — or, at least, escorted from the premises — if we wander off or take photographs around the building. There won’t be any first-hand recordings today, and no fresh hands-on material. There are more than 200 custom-made parts inside the Surface, say Microsoft reps, and nothing is there by accident. We’re here to learn more about the specs, as always, but also to get some insight into how Surface came to be: what compromises were made, and what design ideas were abandoned along the way. If gadget porn is what you’re after, you can revisit our first look from June. But if things like display technology and hinge design float your boat (and why wouldn’t they?) you’ll want to meet us after the break for a more detailed explanation of what Microsoft was trying to achieve.

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Microsoft Surface: inside the three-year secret project to build the first great Windows tablet originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Oct 2012 11:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Microsoft Surface for Windows RT pricing now official: tablet starts at $499, keyboard not included

Microsoft Surface for Windows RT pricing now official: tablet starts at $499, keyboard not included

With Surface for Windows RT going on sale in just 10 days, Microsoft is finally ready to talk about pricing and availability — not to mention, some technical details it left out when the tablet debuted back in June. After the Surface product page prematurely went live on Microsoft’s site a few hours ago, the company just officially announced that the 10.6-inch, ARM-powered slate will go up for pre-order at 9AM PT today, starting at $499 for the 32GB version. The 64GB model will cost $599.

To be clear, these prices do not include that snazzy Touch Cover with the flat, pressure-sensitive keys. Rather, it’ll be sold separately for $120. Ditto for the more traditional Type Cover keyboard, which is priced at $130. If you already know you want the packaged deal, however, you can buy the 64GB tablet and Touch Cover as a bundle for $699. Lastly, when Surface starts shipping on October 26th, you’ll be able to buy it on Microsoft.com or at a Microsoft Store (if you happen to have one in your neck of the woods). If you’re hankering for hands-on photos, we’ll redirect you to the first look we published the day Surface was announced. Hopefully, though, we’ll soon get a review unit so that we can supplement our preview with meaty, real-world impressions.

Continue reading Microsoft Surface for Windows RT pricing now official: tablet starts at $499, keyboard not included

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Microsoft Surface for Windows RT pricing now official: tablet starts at $499, keyboard not included originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 16 Oct 2012 11:00:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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