"four hours fewer of battery life"?
Is it their intention to develop an even thinner device with no battery (life) whatsoever? Sounds like the way to go - at least, if you can't actually turn it on, it won't be able to BSOD (it will just be 'D').
Further evidence that Microsoft wants to broaden the appeal of its boutique Surface hardware has emerged. Almost a month ago, Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman predicted budget Surface hardware was being planned, priced at "about $400... 20 per cent lighter than the high-end models, but [with] around four hours fewer of battery life". …
I hadn't realised that the stylus now works on the basic iPad. However it's nothing like what Microsoft offer, as you can't actually write with it. Or maybe Apple will deign to allow you to use the notes app, I'm not quite sure, but you can't use it to write an email or fill in a form online. Presumably because Steve Jobs once said that stylii were rubbish, and so Apple can't bring themselves to sell one, so they call it a pencil and only really let you draw with it. Very odd that - as my old HP convertible tablet in 2007 did really good handwriting recognition.
After years of reading paper magazines with that anoying curvy dip in the middle of the two pages... Apple produce an electronic magazine that has a flat screen.
Microsoft years later patent the electronic magazine reunited with annoying unreadable bit in the middle.
Seems likely they will be ahead in this segment until Apple's notch reaches the bottom of the screen.
For the same reasons someone might want to install a browser that only allows extensions to be installed from its own store?
> For the same reasons someone might want to install a browser that only allows extensions to be installed from its own store?
Actually, you don't have to worry about. At Win10S you can't install any browser beside Edge. No, even MS IE is not allowed!
Speaking of that other "browser OS", beside native & PWA apps, it runs Android & Linux apps also.
Surprise surprise, it also runs RT apps via Wine 3!
https://mspoweruser.com/wine-3-0-lets-chromebook-users-run-windows-apps/
So, actually, RT is reborn - but at Mountain View, not Redmond. ;-)
... rumours suggest that the new, cheaper Surface will actually work for several days before having to be returned, and that the replacement will endure for as long as a month before also being sent back.
In the long run, though, the new model will reach the standards Microsoft set with the original Surface: no sane person will ever buy a second one, and even long-term Apple-sceptics will say, "Ok, that's it; the hardware's shit; the software's shit; Microsoft is shit" —and ruefully take their flexible friend to the iStore.
They're quite mixed. I'd probably avoid the first iteration (but when was that not true?) and perhaps wait for more of the software (especially Office, it seems) to be natively compiled to the new processor. It's a compelling idea, but the devil is in the implementation.