Sunday, April 12, 2015

Apple fail should be a lesson for Microsoft

Apple fail should be a lesson for Microsoft
Apple is good at addressing design oversights. Will Microsoft be as adept? The Retina iPad, for example, violated Apple's design creed: products should get thinner and lighter -- aka, cooler.Not thicker and heavier. But Apple fixed this quickly (six month later) with the iPad Mini trifecta: thinner, lighter, cheaper.And the iPad, reinvented as the Mini, has been a runaway success.Now that Microsoft is in the business of making tablets, can it act fast when it commits product-design sins?Surface is not a success -- yet.The Surface Pro is too big and heavy (and expensive), according to IDC and plenty of other observers. (It is a tablet, after all, despite Microsoft's valiant attempt to categorize it as a PC). And the RT model is hampered by performance and an unpopular operating system, and it's out of sync -- like the Pro -- with the market shift to smaller tablets. Related storiesA measure of Apple's success: Oppenheimer cites JapanNPD DisplaySearch told CNET this week that Microsoft will bring out a 7.5-inch tablet that sources say may be $400, or possibly cheaper.But that tablet will happen later, not sooner, according to DisplaySearch. That's a problem, because both the RT and Pro, I think, are going to languish in the coming months. And I have a feeling that products like Acer's leaked $380 Iconia 8-inch tablet will not fill the void. Then there's Android.I'm guessing that vendors like Asus and Hewlett-Packard are going to look increasingly to Android for cool, inexpensive designs. Microsoft appears to be serious about doing the Apple thing -- where it designs both the software and hardware -- and wants to make Windows 8 tablets a success.But will it be able to emulate Apple's successful hardware formula?A quick (very quick) refresh would be in order.The clock is ticking.


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