Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 18th Sep 2012 16:26 UTC
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Member since:
2006-07-04
Windows 7 (and XP and Vista) tablets didn't have a touch interface. They had a normal desktop interface, augmented with stylus/pen input widgets and ink support and handwriting recognition support. And they did well in niche business/corporate/government activities where a mobile stylus-based tablet would be useful. But they had no "touch" (i.e. finger-based) UI*, which is what would be more appealing to the general public (outside of the stylus-tablet niche).
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* Actually some Win7 tablets do/did have finger-touch support, but didn't have finger-touch UI. That is, these devices supported finger-touch but the "shell" UI was still the normal desktop, and the apps were normal desktop apps, which are optimized for mouse/keyboard/stylus input rather than finger input.