S & T » Technology 

Microsoft's last Window of hope

Deepa Kurup 

The past decade saw Microsoft Corporation, the company that 
two decades ago gave us the proprietary Windows operating 
system, take a nose dive — from being the market leader to 
losing out in one tech area after the other, search, social 
networking, email, music and mobility.

A late entrant into the mobility game, where globally 
tablets have been replacing the good old personal computer, 
Microsoft's new operating system, Windows 8, is its 
last-ditch attempt at reclaiming the space it has yielded 
over the years to its tech rivals, Apple Inc. and Google 
Inc. 

This release, slated for October 26, represents a major 
rethink for the software major, one that acknowledges the 
tectonic shift in technological choice: from desktops, then 
laptops to tablets and smartphones.

First impressions look good. At the Windows AppFest that 
Microsoft organised in Bangalore in an attempt to build 
traction around the upcoming release, Microsoft gave 
journalists a detailed demo of Windows 8. We tried out 
Windows on tablets as well as desktops, but the news is that 
there's no difference -- it's one OS that fits both (unlike 
Apple that has iOS and OS X, and Google that's building 
Chrome for netbooks and has Android for mobile).

There's no doubt that the interfaces are slick, smooth and 
offer a lot of scope to organise. It's quite intuitive, and 
going by what they show of the user experience, it's an 
attempt to blur the line between the traditional desktop and 
tablet experience. It is packed with new features and, 
understandably, there's a learning curve, but it is all 
quite interesting.

The main feature of the new look is that the entire user 
interface is arranged into neat tiles. These tiles, that are 
grouped together (you can change the grouping to suit your 
usage style) represent different services and applications. 
This interface resembles Metro, its Windows Phone interface 
where it is called 'Live Tiles'. Under the tiles you can 
view live updates for each of your services.

The other big-ticket technological offering is integration 
with the cloud and social media. The Microsoft executive 
giving the demo spent a lot of time on photo-sharing 
features, and on how the new feature set makes updating or 
connecting with friends on multiple social networks or email 
clients easy. At the media interactions, top India leaders 
described the product as a "radical game-changer". 

One of them even compared it to Windows 95, which introduced 
32-bit computing to home PCs and represented a "generation 
shift" in computing. 

While techies at Microsoft are visibly excited, the hard 
truth is that Microsoft needs this product to succeed not 
only in order to remain relevant but also to resuscitate its 
market value. In July this year, Microsoft reported its 
first quarterly loss, a net loss of $492 million. This is 
the first time the corporation saw net profits dip after it 
went public in 1986.

While some of this had to do with the grim market 
environment, a lot of this is expected given that personal 
computer sales have been stagnant for a few years now, and 
registered a decline in recent quarters. Analysts have also 
been harping on that unless Microsoft comes up with a 
product that's a real game-changer, it can barely hope to 
catch up with its adversaries. Microsoft also hopes that the 
new touch-friendly product will make some impact among 
enterprise clients, where its major revenues lie.

Slip-on keyboard?

It's also being widely reported that tablets being shipped 
with Windows 8 are planning on offering snap-on keyboards. 
This will mark a shift from the 'touch-only' approach to 
computing, and several hardware biggies including Samsung, 
HP and Acer are set to do this. 

Tablet makers perhaps hope that this add-on could wean 
consumers away from Apple's iPad, which remains a market 
leader in this segment. This detachable keyboard, which was 
part of the demo equipment shown here, is sleek and goes 
well with the device design. 

Samsung's already demoed a new version of Slate, which runs 
on Windows 8 and will hit the market on the same date as 
Windows 8. This keyboard costs a little less than $ 100, 
which seems to be a good bargain for those who still 
struggle with typing on touch, or feel they'd like it if 
their tablets could double as more traditional computing 
devices.

Reply via email to