alloytoo
Honorary Master
Yesterday I played with an Ativ 500t tablet/hybrid that was bought by my wife's brother. He basically wanted a tablet that he could take around the farm and do Excel inputting on, then turn into a work machine when necessary. Sounds perfect right? The device was a total nightmare from beginning to end:
1) It kept de-connecting and re-connecting the keyboard randomly, so you were never sure if you should be jabbing at the screen or using the mousepad. This was the nr1 issue, and a total dealbreaker.
2) Touchscreen in the Windows desktop environment just doesn't work. It's not made for it. Your fingers hit the wrong menu items all the time.
3) Animations between desktop and Metro were not at all fluid; especially rotating the screen
4) We couldn't get Office 2010 to activate properly after about 20 tries we gave up
5) Couldn't purchase apps from the Win8 store
6) The hardware was very poor. Plastic bendy mousepad, grainy resolution screen for an 11.6' unit. Also 11.6' feels huge for a tablet. Looked like crap next to the iPad.
The only issue was, he sent me one of his Excel files to my iPad to see if one could do it that way, and it struggled with some of the equations in Numbers and Office2HD. So I can totally see why a full fledged Windows machine that could double as a tablet would be attractive.
I'm totally convinced that Windows 8's biggest problem isn't the strategy it chose, it's the ineptness of the execution on that strategy.
Previous 'Touch' interfaces from MS used a stylus, I'm convinced that this is the way to go for business tablets.