Microsoft Begins Surface Tablet Preorders
Microsoft has begun taking online orders for its iPad challenger, due for launch on 26 October
Microsoft is now accepting preorders for its Surface with Windows RT tablet, which will officially become available on 26 October with the launch of its Windows 8 operating system.
Models in 32GB (for $599, or £375) and 64GB (for $699) with black Touch Covers can be preordered for delivery by 26 October, but anyone wanting a 32GB model ($499) without the black Touch Cover will have to wait for up to three weeks, according to the Microsoft website.
Cover options
Two features – the OS aside – make the tablet distinctly un-iPad-like: a built-in kickstand and covers with built-in keyboards that attach magnetically to instantly offer laptop-like usability.
The Touch Cover, priced at $119.99 and available in red, white, magenta and cyan, has a pressure-response keyboard with a trackpad and Windows shortcut keys. The Type Cover, priced at $129.99, is a more traditional keyboard; Microsoft calls it “one of the thinnest mechanical keyboards available.” It’s a QWERTY with a row of function keys, Windows shortcut keys, media controls and a trackpad.
The Surface measures 10.81 by 6.77 by 0.37 inches, weighs less than 1.5 pounds and runs an Nvidia T30 processor with 2GB of RAM. It has front and back cameras, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity options, a full-size USB 2.0 port and a 10.6-inch ClearType HD display. The display also has five-point multi-touch capabilities – a version of the Surface running the full Windows 8 OS, expected in three months’ time, will have 10-point multi-touch – a resolution of 1366 by 768, an aspect radio of 16:9 and recently became the source of some controversy.
Raymond Soneira, president of DisplayMate recently performed a “shoot-out” between the Surface RT tablet, with its ClearType HD display, and the third-generation Apple iPad, which features In-Plane Switching (IPS) technology and a 2048 by 1536 resolution in its 9.7-inch display. As the Surface RT is currently unavailable, in its place Soneira used an Asus netbook with “almost identical” specs.
His motivation, he wrote in an undated blog post, was a Cnet article citing a comment by Microsoft engineer Steven Bathiche.
“Doing a side-by-side with the new iPad in a consistently lit room, we have had many people see more detail on Surface RT than on the iPad with more resolution,” Batchiche wrote in a comment on Reddit.
Display comparison
Wanting to see for himself, Soneira ran the Safari browser on the Asus netbook, iPad and iPad 3, compared them side-by-side, with The New York Times website pulled up.
“All three displays have the same 5.9-inch screen height in Landscape mode, so it was an excellent and very fair comparison,” wrote Soneira.
While the Surface stand-in blew away the iPad 2, he found the iPad 3 to be significantly sharper.
“It is certainly possible that the Microsoft Surface RT Tablet will perform better than the Asus Netbook, but it is very unlikely that it will turn out to be visually sharper than the new iPad 3,” Soneira continued. “On the other hand, the Windows Pro version of Surface will have a 1920×1080 208 PPI screen, and it is quite possible that it will be comparable in sharpness to the new iPad 3 with 2048×1536 264 PPI. It will be really interesting to compare them all.”
Soneira plans to do just that when the Surface RT becomes available.
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Originally published on eWeek.