The manufacturer and Microsoft partner changes its tone on the Surface tablet.
Uh oh, looks like Mircrosoft's partners really are not big fans of the Surface.
Oliver Ahrens, Acer's senior VP and president for Europe, Middle East and Africa, told Reuters that Microsoft's strategy to take on Apple with the Surface
tablet will fail.
Microsoft left its partners in the dark about its tablet, releasing it this week at a secretive, Apple-style press event. While it generated some buzz, there are still questions around price, battery life, and connectivity that may take away from its initial energy. And Ahren's comments probably don't help.
"I don't think it will be successful because you cannot be a hardware
player with two products," he said to Reuters. "Microsoft is working
with two dozen PC vendors worldwide, including the local guys, whereas
Apple is alone, it can more or less do what it wants. Microsoft is a
component of a PC system. A very important component but still a
component."
Instead of focusing on Windows 8, the software giant has started a whole
new war with Apple, and the products -- and partners -- will suffer,
Ahrens said.
This is not the positive spin reportedly heard
earlier from Acer founder Stan Shih, who said Microsoft will use its
tablet to spur device makers to bring out their own Windows 8 tablets,
and then withdraw from the market.
Shih said Microsoft has "no reason" to sell hardware because it is less
profitable than licensing software, adding that he had "analyzed"
Microsoft's strategy in order to reach his conclusion.
A Dell spokesman offered some lukewarm support for
Microsoft following the Surface unveiling: "We remain committed
partners to Microsoft. We remain committed to Windows 8, and we will
have a Slate product at the time of launch."
It's not surprising
that Microsoft key partners, who were not informed about the Surface
until just before the announcement on Monday, question Microsoft's plan
to compete with them. "The move is a vote of no confidence in these
partners, who should rightly feel slighted...or challenged," said Jan
Dawson, an analyst at research firm Ovum.
It may be that Microsoft
is hedging its bets, carving out an Apple-like product development
team that marries hardware and software under the Microsoft brand, and
trying to inspire makers of Windows systems to step up their game in
developing Window 8 and Windows RT tablets and ultrabooks to compete
with Apple iOS and Google
Android devices.
If
the Surface doesn't take off, as Acer's Ahrens suggests, Microsoft
better hope that its partners can deliver the kind of products that will
keep the hundreds of millions of desktop Windows users from defecting
to the competition as they transition to mobile platforms for work and
play.
Source: news.cnet.net
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