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Posts Tagged ‘Windows 8’

I’ve waxed pseudo-poetically on the joys of having a media center PC, having gone through several configurations before settling on the combination of Mac Mini and Plex Media Center as the best solution for me. Sadly, digital media aficionados like me may soon have one less option when building the living room system of their dreams.

Engadget reported recently that Windows 8 will apparently lack the mostly overlooked Media Center software included in Windows 7. The latest preview release of Win8 lacks some key components of the software, a bad sign for what seemed like the spiritual inspiration for the Metro interface. While losing (at least partially) an option for media center PCs, hardware solutions are growing with the upcoming revision to Google TV, improvements to the Roku lineup, expansions to standalone DVRs like Tivo, and the long-rumored Apple television.

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I hadn’t managed to watch any of the clips of Microsoft’s announcement of their new Surface tablets (I love tech, but making a living comes first) until this little gem came to me via one of my RSS feeds:

Coincidence? The comparison is more than a little damning, even if the clips are edited. It’s still too early to say what the Surface’s long term prospects are, but I do think it’s safe to say that Microsoft needs this tablet far more than consumers do. Android tablets still don’t offer enough value for many consumers to opt for one over Apple’s offering, but after three years the tablet market may be winding down its boom phase. Finding new uses for the devices is likely to fuel more sales than new users that haven’t owned a tablet, and Apple has a tremendous head start in app development, infrastructure, accessories, and institutional support. Microsoft really needs the Surface to at least be passable in order to keep from missing out on this genre entirely.

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Microsoft‘s big announcement is out- the long-awaited Windows 8 tablets have been teased, and the big surprise is that Microsoft is getting into the hardware manufacturing game in an attempt to spur innovation among third party hardware manufacturers and go head to head with Apple. For those of you that haven’t been inundated with the reports, the new Microsoft manufactured devices (dubbed the Surface) will come in two flavors: a unit sporting an ARM processor that will run a version of Windows 8 that will not run software compatible with other systems like desktops, and an X86 processor version running the full Windows 8 operating system.

Actual technicals specifications are somewhat thin. Both will have a magnesium alloy body and a 10.6 inch Gorilla Glass display (surprisingly larger than the iPad‘s 9.7 inch display). Unlike the iPad, the Microsoft tablets will have several ports: USB 2, HDMI, and microSD. Both models are heavier than the iPad (although the ARM version is only fractionally so). The form factor also deviates from the iPad’s as necessitated by the extra input ports; where the iPad is sleek and rounded the Surface tablets are more squared off with flat sides. Two clever and stylish covers have been featured as well; not only do they protect the unit they double as a keyboard and trackpad when opened. One version relies on an accelerometer and touch sensor to replicate a keyboard, the other has a more traditional construction (although pundits haven’t been allowed to use either yet). The Windows 8 Metro interface will immediately differentiate these tablets from competitors when powered up- while I’m very pessimistic of the Metro interface on traditional laptops and desktops, I expect it to shine on tablets (as it does on the latest generation of Windows phone).

With suggestions that the x86 tablet will be priced similarly to ultraportables I think Microsoft may be trying to create a new subcategory of device, between the tablet and ultraportable. The device’s keyboard has been stated to have a trackpad, a strange choice of input for a class of devices that focuses on touch screens as the primary source of interaction. While it’s pure speculation, it seems as though the x86 version is an attempt to make the best of both worlds- light, slim, set apart from other devices by the addition of touchscreen capability and being able to remove the keyboard but still offering the same full operating system of ultraportables instead of a pared down mobile OS.

The ARM version of the Surface tablet is the true tablet competitor. The ARM processor is the same as used by some Android tablets, and the version of Windows 8 it sports shares only the Metro interface with its more powerful sibling. The loss of functionality is a trade off for lower cost, better battery life and less heat byproduct, but there is bound to be some confusion among the Windows faithful as to why they can’t run their software on a Windows device. Other than the Metro interface there’s not a great deal to differentiate the ARM processor version of Microsoft’s tablet from its competitors.

So is Apple justifiably nervous? It’s too early to say if this new lineup is a legitimate competitor to the iPad; questions still abound over multiple factors: the battery life isn’t even hinted at, there’s a legitimate concern over how much heat the devices will generate (tablets have favored low powered mobile processors for both battery life and lower heat generation), confusion over what to expect from the Win8 app library (as the two devices aren’t fully software compatible), and most importantly the PRICE. Prices were hinted at, but to be truly competitive the devices must at least meet their primary competitor. Both versions of the new tablet have their own hurdles; the ARM version may operate as other tablets but it won’t meet the needs of those that have been waiting for a tablet running Windows, and the x86 may be short on battery life and RAM (most full OS systems need four gigabytes of RAM, but tablets to date have had a maximum of one).

Still, the limited exposure pundits have been allowed has resulted in some positive buzz. Windows 8 is at home on tablets, and Microsoft has the benefit of building off of Apple and Google’s experience in the tablet market. Microsoft has been building toward this release for some time, and after their failure with the Zune and Courier tablet I’d imagine they have put a great deal more focus on releasing a competitive product. It’s foolish to label the Surface tablet (or any of its third party Windows 8 tablet brethren) as iPad killers; the iPad effectively created the device genre and has a huge user base that is still expanding. That being said, there are still a large number of users that simply don’t like the Apple lineup and would flock to a viable competitor, especially if that competitor offered greater compatibility with an already-established Windows user base.

Going into the hardware market has risks; there is bound to be discontent among Microsoft’s manufacturing partners. To date Microsoft has made their place in the market as a software company, leaving the hardware form factor to its resellers. Those retailers likely don’t appreciate the extra competition from Microsoft as most resellers have dealt with raz0r-thin profits in an increasingly competitive market. While Microsoft has ventured into (successful) hardware manufacture before with the XBox, the Surface tablets blaze new ground as they will be listed alongside other tablets running the same operating system. Microsoft controlling both the software and hardware of a product line threatens to shunt them into the same ‘closed system’ category of Apple’s iOS, with all aspects of the device controlled by a (hopefully) benevolent dictator. Window’s ‘openness’ is a byproduct of Microsoft’s business strategy of focusing solely on being a software vendor and leaving hardware configuration to its resellers; without those resellers Microsoft is free to pursue the advantages that Apple has created by controlling their entire product line- but at the expense of losing one of the primary factors that advocates have touted.

I’m hoping for good things from Microsoft’s release of Windows 8; it’s been stated ad nauseum competition breed innovation. Without the pressure to innovate the market would become stagnant, and Android has offered only token resistance to the tidal wave of iOS devices. While I have no desire to leave the warm, comforting embrace of the Apple-verse, I look forward to what Microsoft is going to bring to the table- and what this will spur Apple to do in answer.

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Mobility is one of the primary focuses in the development of new computers. A quick glance at the numbers of iOS devices Apple alone has put into the hands of consumers over the past five years supports this assertion. The trend becomes even more apparent when you factor in other devices designed with portability in mind- competing Android and Windows 8 tablets, the MacBook Air and competing ultraportables, all the way to the new MacBook Pro Retina Display (clocking in at less than an inch thick closed and weighing just under four and a half pounds- less than some textbooks I’ve had to lug around).

Plenty has been done to make your portable computing experience possible, but with that portability comes risk. All of those portable devices need a network connection to be fully functional, and that connection is often of the free public wifi version. While handy, that free wifi can leave you vulnerable to snooping, and depending on what transaction you’re conducting that snooping could lead to far worse repercussions. 

Lifehacker has some helpful information on how to better safeguard your communication when using public wifi. The article covers both Windows and OSX tips, and covers factors that you might not consider when out and about like turning off filesharing.

If you use your device for both home and mobile tasks, the article is a worthy read. Some tips are obvious to most tech-savvy users, but due diligence in computer security is everyone’s responsibility.

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Microsoft has been lauded for being able to do what Google couldn’t with Android- create an interface that is fundamentally different from iOS. While I haven’t had the opportunity to use it, the Metro interface for the soon-to-be-released Windows 8 has been touted as a welcome evolution to the venerable Windows OS and the foundation for the merger of mobile and desktop systems much as Apple has begun to do with iOS and OSX.

One of the main talking points about the Metro interface is its originality, but after seeing some of the initial images and animations, I had the strange feeling I had seen it before. While my memory isn’t always the best, this feeling has been at least partially confirmed with a cursory image search.

Metro does away with the traditional Windows desktop and program shortcuts in favor of brightly colored tiles acting as both widgets and launch icons. The tiles can display some realtime information and a click on the tile launches the full app much like the traditional desktop shortcut icons Windows users have used since the days of Win95:

But this layout has graced Windows before. It wasn’t that long ago that I had been looking for the best option for building a Windows-based media center PC (before deciding the Mac Mini was the best option). My first attempt was to use the built-in Windows Media Center in Windows 7. At first glance the clean, nicely animated app looked like a good option- it did a better job than the updated Windows Media Center at organizing my music collection, had DVR functionality, could play DVDs, and touted access to streaming online video. Ultimately, I abandoned WMC because it didn’t live up to its billing; the streaming options didn’t offer the sources I wanted, the DVR never worked for me, and the process of playing a DVD through WMC was more cumbersome than either playing it in a dedicated DVD player or using VLC/Win DVD/Windows Media Player on the PC.

This is a sample of the interface that sparked my memory when I first saw Metro:

The album listing was even more similar:

although not as polished as Metro’s album selection:

From the perspective of functionality, Metro bears less in common with Windows 7′s Media Center but the legacy is still apparent. From the layout to the font and animation, the foundation of Metro had been with Microsoft for at least a couple of years before it was given center stage. This isn’t a bad thing; the polished look of the media center in Win7 was its best feature. It does make me wonder if Microsoft had bigger plans for the interface. Easing Windows users into this new interface would have been an easier effort that the more drastic Metro-with-a-hidden-Windows-emulator setup of Win8. Windows Media Center’s layout could have been a sign of an attempt to implement something that would have been more of a factor in touchscreen-based computing but Microsoft either lacked the vision to pursue it or had issues that limited its deployment. Like Google Wave, what seemed like a good idea withered from a lack of use, publicity, and development.

Regardless of its origins, Windows 8 and Metro stand to be the first real challenger to the combined offering of OSX and iOS. I for one think this is a very good thing; competition drives innovation, and even a company that has built it’s fortune through vision and innovation needs a push occasionally.

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I’ve never been tempted to jailbreak any of my iOS devices. The additional functionality afforded by Cydia apps just didn’t offer enough upside for me to abandon the warm embrace of official iOS-dom. 

CNET brings news today of the first app that’s given me the urge to delve into jail breaking- Quasar. Quasar is simply what multitasking should be on the iPad- making iOS essentially a touch-based desktop OS. Apps can be either full screen or windowed, fully positionable and resizable with controls for rendering a windowed app in portrait or landscape mode. The demonstration video sets my gadget lust tingling. Sadly, as mentioned earlier the app doesn’t have the blessings of Cupertino and isn’t available in the iTunes App Store- to purchase it you’ll have to jailbreak your iPad and nab it from the Cydia App Store.

I do hope that Apple is paying attention to the avalanche of press Quasar is generating; demand drives innovation, and I’d be overjoyed if Apple were to incorporate something like this into iOS officially. With the pending release of Windows 8 on multiple devices, iOS could use a paradigm-shifting addition to keep their category-dominating status.

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