In targeting casinos, restaurants, and hotels, Microsoft knows it is barely scratching the surface of the demand for its tabletop computer. The company is convinced there is a mass market for an interactive touch-screen computer, but perhaps not in its current USD 10000 version. CEO Steve Ballmer told financial analysts last month that Microsoft had a plan to speed up the arrival of a consumer version of the tabletop computer Surface.
As a famiy game board would be fun, the most expensive monoply game ever,
Edited 2008-03-27 19:19 UTC
It’s cool and everything, but wouldn’t it be an ergonomic nightmare for extended use? Hunching over a table all day would not make your back feel very nice, methinks.
First of all what makes you assume that anybody expects this to replace your normal computer. That is not and never has been its point. Everybody, including Microsoft, agrees that trying to write your PhD thesis on this thing is just plain stupid.
Secondly why would you be hunching? Look at a draftsman’s or drawing table. They’re designed so you can work on them all day without any need for hunching. If these things become popular and people start using them for long periods of time what makes you think they wouldn’t come up with some kind of similar solution.
Isn’t Surface basically a rear-projection box? Unless they can shrink it down to a flat-panel package, drawing table-like angle adjustments seem a bit cumbersome.
http://www.touchtable.com/site/tt45.php
I could see this thing taking off big in casinos with the right software.
Four words: real time strategy games.
One word: done
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CYY-g6ionzM