Microsoft Corp introduced its own line of tablet computers on Monday to compete with Apple Inc’s Ipad.
The new tablet line, named Surface, includes a consumer
device aimed directly at the Apple ipad, and another, larger machine
designed to compete with lightweight laptops. Both include a keyboard
that doubles as a cover, and both will be powered by versions of the new
Windows 8 operating system.
The move breaks with Microsoft’s operating model of the past 37
years, which has relied on computer manufacturers to make and market
machines running Windows. It could throw the world’s largest software
company into direct competition with its closest hardware partners such
as Samsung Electronics Co Ltd and Hewlett-Packard Co.
The new software is the biggest overhaul of Windows in years, and
features a new touch-friendly interface dubbed “Metro”. It is scheduled
to be available for the Christmas shopping season.
The lighter, thinner version of the Surface tablet, built on an
Nvidia Corp chip designed by ARM Holdings, will be the first to market
at the same time as the general release of Windows 8, and will feature
Microsoft’s popular Office suite of applications.
It is comparable to Apple’s new iPad, heavier but slightly thinner.
It has a 10.6 inch screen and comes in 32GB and 64GB memory sizes.
A second, heavier tablet aimed at the new generation of lightweight
laptops called “ultrabooks”, running on traditional Intel Corp chips,
will come in 64GB and 128GB models. That will be available about three
months after the ARM version, Microsoft said.
The company gave no details on pricing, except that they would be
competitive with comparable ARM tablets and Intel-powered Ultrabooks.
They will be on sale online and in Microsoft’s new brick-and-mortar
stores in the United States.

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