Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 16th Oct 2012 12:14 UTC
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Member since:
2006-01-27
It did sound too good to be true. That's why I didn't hold my breath waiting for the Surface; last month I bought the 7" Samsung Galaxy Tab for $250-ish (the 10" model would have cost $399, which is generally beyond my budget for unnecessary toys). Both of those models are priced $50 lower now than last month - quality units that like it or not, Microsoft will be competing with on price.
The "flop" prediction isn't based on price alone, but it's obviously important. People who want a quality affordable tablet are going to choose the Nexus, Samsung, Kindle, etc. People who want to spend more for a trendy tablet at still going to choose the iPad. Then there's the software. How long will it take for Microsoft's app store to catch up to Android and Apple? We've yet to see any reviews of the Surface, but that could be a factor as well.
The lastest iPad sold three million for the first weekend alone, and Apple has sold 84 Million iPads so far. So if your numbers are accurate Microsoft is setting the bar very low indeed. Keeping the supply artificially low to create the illusion of demand? Or they really expect weak demand for the Surface?
Edited 2012-10-17 14:03 UTC