Is Microsoft’s Windows $0.99 app omission madness, money or moral?

When you’re trying to kick-start your tablet platform, apps are everything, so why has Microsoft decided to opt out of the most common price point in recent years: the $0.99 app? Confirmation this weekend that Windows 8 and Windows RT users would be offered paid apps as well as free (unsurprising) and that developers would be able to price their wares from $1.49 to $999.99 (surprising) is a distinct departure from Apple and Google’s strategy. According to the stereotypes, iOS users love paying for apps while Android users only download free ones (or steal them until the apps are made free out of exasperation), but what do Windows tablet owners do?

Microsoft makes no mention of the thinking behind the price tiers, though there are a couple of assumptions we could make. The first is purely motivated by greed: Microsoft gets 30-percent of each paid app sale (dropping to 20-percent should the app make more than $25,000). If a developer wants to make money from their software but opts for the lowest possible price to encourage downloads, Microsoft will take away $0.45 on a $1.49 purchase, versus $0.30 on a $0.99 app.

If that were entirely the case, though, then you might expect Windows Phone to also kick off with the $1.49 tier, and yet on Microsoft’s smartphone platform there are $0.99 apps. Perhaps, then, Microsoft simply believes that tablet apps should be more expensive than phone apps, reflecting some greater expectation of functionality in software designed for the bigger screen.

Such an expectation holds true for developers as much as users: Microsoft could be trying to gently persuade Windows 8/RT coders to up their game when they create tablet apps for the platform, and to stretch a little further than they might for a relatively “throwaway” dollar app. Similarly, users could grow to expect more from the software they buy, with the $1.49 price point acting as a mental graduation up from the assumptions made around cheaper software (even if that cheaper price point isn’t even available on that particular platform).

“Could Microsoft be taking a moral stand?”

Still, is it too much to hope that Microsoft might be taking a moral stand of sorts, and suggesting that it believes software simply should be more expensive? Plenty of developers have grown disillusioned with the app ecosystem and its race to ninety-nine cents, and while some software is certainly disposable enough to make the price tag fit, other coders find themselves stuck facing either devaluing their hard work with a price that will get attention, and asking a little more and ending up ignored.

The reality is likely a combination of the three: a healthy dose of self interest and, yes, the preoccupation that, as primarily a software company itself, seeing apps undervalued doesn’t bode well for the long-term. It’s a potentially dangerous strategy given Microsoft’s position near the back of the tablet race, but it could be the wildcard that prompts developers to give Windows a second look.


Is Microsoft’s Windows $0.99 app omission madness, money or moral? is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Microsoft Live web services to receive makeover?

New HotmailEven though it’s still a few months away, It looks like Microsoft is already gearing up for the official release of Windows RT. According to reports online, Microsoft has been silently updating its Microsoft account login page with a hint of Metro in the redesign. It hasn’t changed for me, so it’s probably a staged rollout or just a limited test, but from the screenshots I’ve seen, it looks pretty good (not like the previous login pages were bad, I just think this new interface is much more eye-pleasing).

In addition to the use of bright colors, some things have changed i.e. “Windows Live ID” has been replaced with “Microsoft account” and the “Sign in” button is slightly bigger, which should make it easier to press with your fingers on a touchscreen. I wonder if Microsoft will be revamping the looks of its services in addition to the login pages. What do you think of this new Metro-fied interface?

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Fujitsu Stylistic Q552 is another Windows tablet, Windows 8 confirmed for October release,

New Leaked Screenshots Make Windows 8 Metro Look Even Better [Windows 8]

WinUnleaked has some new leaked screenshots from Microsoft’s Windows 8 RTM (Release to Manufacturers) build that show how the new OS will look. From the look of them, Microsoft is making an effort to make Metro work as a unifying design across all of Windows 8. More »

Windows 8 Store Will Offer Free Seven Day Trials for Paid Apps [Windows 8]

Microsoft has released the details on how they plan to run the apps released through the new App Store coming with Windows 8. We have known about the store for a long time, but this is the first time we’ve heard about the inner workings of the apps, like the cut Microsoft plans to take. More »

SlashGear Morning Wrap-Up: July 20, 2012

This morning it’s time to continue the epic saga that is the Parisian McDonalds wearable camera incident – with Steve Mann continuing his quest to make AR a reality for the universe. Yahoo is pleading with their staff to “please don’t stop” – an odd battle cry if ever have we heard one. Those of you waiting for Jelly Bean on your Android phones might want to turn to Nokia – yes Nokia – to find it: Android 4.1 has been ported to the N9.

Science is making a healthy attempt at getting smudge-free touchscreens for the near future. It’s once again time to check out Marissa Mayer’s cash fee for heading to Yahoo as its new CEO. There’s an update to Jelly Bean in Australia for emergency calls. You’ll want to take a peek at the LG IPS7 Series LCD IPS display and its easy to use MHL port.

You wont be seeing Thunderbolt 20Gbps until 2014 – bummer! Have a peek at how Microsoft has enlisted a Special Projects chief to replace their shuttered skunkworks. Make sure you check out the column entitled Will public shame stem Apple’s patent aggression?


SlashGear Morning Wrap-Up: July 20, 2012 is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Microsoft demonstrates the universe-exploring abilities of Windows 8

For those of you waiting for Windows 8′s final release on October 26th will be glad to know that you’ll soon be able to explore the universe with your fingertips thanks to Microsoft’s new collaboration with PixelSense. This technology has been demonstrated with an application called NUIverse this week at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference on the massive tabletop device known as the Samsung SUR40. Here you’ll find the whole universe – or at least a massive part of it – able to be explored by you with the tips of your fingers.

This demonstration takes place over the course of four minutes at the conference courtesy of Microsoft Technology Center UK’s David Brown, a fellow who you might also know from his extensive blog on this subject by the name of Dr Dave. There you’ll find expanded a beastload of information on the application you’re about to see here, complete with constellation implementation and development of the gesture controls now made possible with PixelSense and the Windows-rocking Samsung tabletop you see below.

Have a peek at this most advanced demonstration of how Windows 8 working with Microsoft’s PixelSense technology will be bringing the universe to you up close and personal:

As Dr Dave himself notes, key elements demonstrated in the video include:

• Multi-touch to control complex camera motion
• Multi-direction UI consistent with a horizontal display form-factor and multiple concurrent users
• Level-of-Detail rendering for planetary bodies and backgrounds
• Independant control of time and position
• Control selection using just-in-time-chrome
• Satellite model rendering

This talk is part of a series of bits from WPC in 2012 hosted by Microsoft’s Jon Roskill and Steve Clayton. If you were lucky enough to be in Toronto for this event, you saw NUIverse as well as a collection of demonstrations on how Microsoft is putting themselves squarely in the path of next-generation innovation that’ll work great with – you guessed it – Windows 8. Can’t wait for more big ideas!


Microsoft demonstrates the universe-exploring abilities of Windows 8 is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Nokia’s Elop: “Our aim is to become the ‘Where’ company”

Nokia is hoping to follow Google and Facebook in cornering the market in speciality services, with CEO Stephen Elop revealing that the company’s “aim is to become the ‘Where?” company.” Just as Google became the go-to place for “What?” and Facebook for “Who?”, Nokia will look to use the growing importance of the smartphone as a hub for location-based services.

“The mobile device will become the nucleus for collecting real-time data from sensors” Elop explained. Handsets that can capture location, orientation, speed and even pulse rate from their integrated sensor arrays, along with tracking social media preferences – our likes and dislikes.

“We could be a leader” in this new direction of services, Elop argues, pointing to the increasing closeness between Windows Phone 8 and Windows 8. “We expect the launch of Windows 8 for tablets and PCs, and Windows Phone 8, to be a catalyst for Lumia” Elop says.

Exactly what those location-based services might take the form of is unclear. Nokia has already taken advantage of its NAVTEQ technology to develop apps like Nokia Drive and Nokia Transport for Windows Phone, but the contextual integration is a new direction.

That’s not to say it’s a direction Nokia has no experience in. The company showed off a so-called Linked Internet UI system back in 2009, which used pattern tracking and location to aggregate content dispersed across across multiple services. It’s a strategy similar to what Google has done with Google Now in Android Jelly Bean; more details in the concept video:

Nokia Linked Internet UI:


Nokia’s Elop: “Our aim is to become the ‘Where’ company” is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


European Commission investigating Windows 8 browser options

Microsoft found itself in a tough spot this week as the European Commission announced that it would investigate the lack of a browser choice screen on PCs Windows 7 Service Pack 1. Microsoft responded by saying that a technical glitch prevented PCs from seeing the option screen, and offered to extend the compliance period. The company may still face sanctions, and now the European Commission has set its sights on Windows 8 for a similar issue.

Reuters reports that the European Commission is looking into Microsoft’s handling of third-party browsers in Windows 8. Microsoft only provides a limited set of APIs to vendors such as Mozilla and Google, preventing browsers offered by those companies from making full use of Windows 8 features. The same goes for Windows RT, where Microsoft will allow Internet Explorer to run on both Metro and the desktop interface, whereas third-party browsers will be restricted to Metro only.

The European Commission isn’t the only organization looking into the issue. Back in May, the US Senate Committee said it intended to look into the browser issue surrounding Windows RT, but that it had no plans to launch a formal antitrust investigation. The announcement followed complaints from Mozilla that the browser plans for Windows RT were anticompetitive, saying that certain APIs were restricted on ARM chips to just Internet Explorer.


European Commission investigating Windows 8 browser options is written by Ben Kersey & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


N-Trig pen tech whittled down to single DuoSense chips and sensors, shrinks scribblings to travel size

N-Trig DuoSense Android tablet

As much as N-Trig is an old hand at supporting styluses, it’s had to focus on tablets and other larger devices due to technology limits: the HTC Flyer is about as small as the company has gone to date. A new version of N-Trig’s DuoSense chipset family could be the ticket to going to much smaller sizes. The new 4000 series condenses both pen input and multi-touch finger gestures into a combination of one chip and one sensor, letting any entrepreneurial device maker stuff the two control methods into a handheld device with as little as a 5-inch display. Naturally, the chip line scales all the way to 15.6-inch panels for creatives poking at the screens of laptops and larger Ultrabooks. We’re told that both Android and Windows slates will get N-Trig’s tinier touch tricks before the end of the year — whether or not that includes phablets with the same girth as the Galaxy Note or Optimus Vu, however, is left to our wild imaginings.

Continue reading N-Trig pen tech whittled down to single DuoSense chips and sensors, shrinks scribblings to travel size

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Fujitsu Stylistic Q552 Windows Tablet

Fujitsu Stylistic Q552 Windows Tablet

The Fujitsu Stylistic Q552 Windows tablet is a successor to the previously released Stylistic Q550. Available in a 32GB or a 64GB of storage space, the new tablet features a 10-inch IPS display with a 1280 x 800 pixel resolution, a 1.6 GHz Intel Atom N2600 Cedar Trail processor, an Intel GMA 3600 graphics, a 2GB RAM and an SDcard slot. The gadget also provides several connectivity options such as USB 2.0, HDMI and Bluetooth 4.0. Other specs include a front-facing camera for Skype video calls and a 3-megapixel rear-facing camera. Too bad, there is no info on pricing or availability at this moment. [Liliputing]