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COMPUTEX: Windows 8 tablets that stole the show

COMPUTEX: Windows 8 tablets that stole the show

By:  Agam Shah  On: 12 Jun 2012 For: IDG News Service (New York Bureau) Creator
 

With a colourful array of new tablets and ultrabooks running the operating system, Microsoft is going to give Android and iOS a run for their money

NEW YORK -- Touch was the hot trend at last week's Computex trade show in Taipei, with computer makers showing off tablets and ultrabook-tablet hybrids with detachable or folding touchscreens. The devices ran either Windows 8 (for Intel processors) or Windows RT (for ARM processors), OSes due for release later this year that are designed for touch interfaces. Prices were not immediately available on most tablet or hybrid models, leaving questions about whether touch devices will be priced at a premium. For example, Dell has already said that it would price touchscreen devices higher compared to the non-touch counterparts.

Asus's Taichi

A week ahead of Computex. Asus teased that it was coming out with something big, and the company didn't disappoint. The Taichi is a thin-and-light, laptop-tablet hybrid highlighted by two high-definition screens on both sides of the display panel. The laptop looks like a thin-and-light laptop, but when it is closed, the second outer screen is activated, giving it the look of a tablet. Both screens can be activated in laptop mode, allowing the same desktop image to be viewed on both screens when users are sitting on opposite sides of a desk. Users don't have to sit next to each other, and it's a good way to share content, said Jonney Shih, Asus' chairman, during a press conference at Computex. Prices were not available, but the Taichi is expected to come later this year with Intel's latest Core processors code-named Ivy Bridge and Windows 8 OS, The laptop will be offered with screen sizes of 13.3 inches and 11.6 inches.

Asus Tablet 600

Asus's second surprise was the Tablet 600, a Windows RT tablet running on an ARM processor. Windows has grown up on x86 processors, and this was among the first tablets announced combining Windows with ARM. Tablet 600 should give Microsoft a foothold in the tablet market and an opportunity to complete with Google's Android and Apple's iOS mobile OSes. The Asus tablet has a 10.1-inch screen and Nvidia's Tegra 3 processor. A keyboard dock can make it a fully functional laptop and provide extended battery life. But questions remain regarding how fast and effective a Windows RT tablet will be, and whether it will appeal to buyers. The Tablet 600 was kept under glass at Asus' booth in the Nangang exhibition hall in Taipei, preventing showgoers from playing with it.

Tablets with Intel's Clover Trail

Intel said that close to 20 Windows 8 tablets are in the works with its upcoming low-power Atom chip code-named Clover Trail, and some were on display at Computex. One of them was Asus' Tablet 810, which has an 11.6-inch screen and weighs 700 grams. In tests, the tablet booted up in about 20 seconds but stuttered when running some programs. The same was the case with the ThinkPad Tablet, which fumbled in executing some touch features during an Intel keynote. Intel's aim with Clover Trail is to provide a legitimate competitor to ARM processors, which are used in most tablets. Clover Trail seems to be a work in progress, and tablets are due to become available with the release of Windows 8 sometime later this year.


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agam shah Agam Shah Agam Shah is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more t... more

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