Surface: Microsoft-Made Windows 8 Tablets Coming This Year
Microsoft’s mystery event
turned out to be the announcement for Microsoft Surface, a pair of
Windows 8 tablets made by the company and scheduled to launch later this
year.
Microsoft is recycling the Surface name–previously used for the
company’s large touch screen setups–for two tablets with 10.6-inch touch
screens. Both tablets are encased in magnesium, and have built-in
stands that unfold from the back side of the device. A separate screen
cover includes a full multi-touch keyboard and trackpad on its
underside, essentially turning the tablet into a laptop.
The main difference between the two Surface tablets is the type of
processor and corresponding version of Windows that each one uses. One
tablet uses an Intel Ivy Bridge processor and comes with Windows 8 Pro,
which allows it to run legacy Windows programs and Metro-style apps from
the Windows Store.
The other tablet will use Nvidia’s Tegra 3 chip and run Windows RT, a
separate version of Windows for ARM-based processors. It will be
thinner, lighter and less expensive than the Intel-based (x86) tablet.
(Microsoft hasn’t announced pricing for Surface tablets, but says the
ARM-based version will cost about the same as competing tablets, while
the Intel-based tablet will cost roughly the same as Ultrabook laptops.)

With previous versions of Windows, Microsoft only made the software,
and left the hardware to companies like HP and Dell. Other companies
will still be able to make Windows 8 laptops, tablets and hybrids, but
Microsoft now sees an advantage in designing its own hardware–an obvious
nod to Apple’s success with the iPad. It’s unclear how other hardware
makers will respond, or whether they even knew this was coming, as the
nature of the Surface event was kept secret from the press until they
arrived.
Microsoft says the ARM-based version of
Surface will launch alongside
Windows RT and Windows 8–probably around October, according to
unconfirmed reports–and the x86 version will launch 90 days later.
My colleague, Harry McCracken, was at the launch event, where
Microsoft provided hands-on time with Surface. Stay tuned for his
impressions, and check out the list of specs for Microsoft
Surface below:
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