Tablet PC Redux?

Do Windows 8 devices meet customer needs, or is this just Tablet PC all over again?

With the advent of Windows 8 and a new class of hybrid PCs and devices, the Windows world is about to be plunged into a more portable and mobile future. But haven’t we been down this road before? And have Microsoft and its PC maker partners learned the lessons of their past failures?

Say what you will about Microsoft and innovation—the consensus is that these terms together are an oxymoron—but one area in which it was decidedly ahead of the game is with tablet computing. Relax, PC historians, I’m not claiming that Microsoft “invented” this market. But I am claiming that once the firm had established its dominance of the PC market with Windows XP, it turned towards a variety of initiatives in which this newly formidable product could be melded to new businesses. And a key initiative, the brainchild of co-founder Bill Gates, was Tablet PC computing.

Tablet PCs, backed by two generations of Windows XP Tablet PC Edition, the first of which appeared in 2002, and by subsequent releases of Windows, never took off in the marketplace. Reflecting on this, I recall the issues being the lack of reasonably mobile Intel chipsets and the subsequent poor performance and battery life of the first generation of products. But these issues were fixed over time, and to be fair, the biggest positive aspect of Tablet PCs, the convertible PC design, actually came from PC makers—whom we usually complain are slow-moving and lacking in innovation—and not from Microsoft.

In 2010, when Apple announced its iPad, I infamously described the product as a letdown in my coverage of the launch, Apple Drops an iDud. I wasn’t the only one who was wrong about the iPad, but to at least excuse my first impressions of the device, the one thing that Apple people will never understand was that I, unlike them, had had almost a decade of Tablet PC experience coloring my view of the iPad. I had experienced the failure of the Tablet PC firsthand and probably have spent more time trying to use these types of devices than almost anyone. So the iPad didn’t impress.

Until, of course, it did. The first iPad was good, but the second iPad was great. And of course Apple hasn’t looked back since. And while the iPad is shedding market share to Android, an inevitable event, it also rightfully created a new market for touch-based portable computing devices in a way that Microsoft never did, despite being in market 8 years earlier.

How is this? And are the new generation of Windows 8 devices repeating the same mistakes?

First, the iPad succeeded in part by being late to market. That is, in the intervening years, Apple created a compelling new device infrastructure in iOS that is far more efficient on a new generation of ARM-based mobile devices than is Windows. It focused on the easy—finger/touch control—rather than the hard—stylus and handwriting recognition—and created a system that was aimed at consumers not businesses users. And it established a formal ecosystem for apps and content that has exploded in ways that Microsoft never even considered previously; today, all device ecosystems copy the Apple model.

Microsoft had this experience to build off of when creating Windows 8. And while it certainly learned from Apple in some key ways, the parallels with 2002 and the first Tablet PCs are somewhat amazing.

In 2002, Microsoft’s hardware partners went to market with Intel’s inefficient chipsets of the day, resulting in poor battery life and performance. But one company, Transmeta, offered a better, more device-like experience with a “code morphing microprocessor” that promised low power consumption and heat dissipation. It just ran Windows and its applications really slowly. You know, just like ARM does today.

Remember this little badboy?

In 2002, Microsoft wanted to push slate PC designs, but its PC maker partners saw the futility in this and offered a convertible PC design that let a single device double as a laptop and a stylus-capable (but thick) tablet. Today, Microsoft is pushing a slate PC design, the Surface, while its partners are almost universally offering hybrid PCs of all kinds, especially convertibles. (Even the “detachable” Samsung ATIV Smart PC I just wrote about is basically just a new take on the convertible.)

There are differences, too, most of which are related to the same technology-based improvements that have helped Apple. Windows 8 is a “touch-first” OS, so while it still supports the Tablet PC-style stylus input that’s been sitting dormantly in Windows for years, it was designed primarily for touch-based devices, just like iPad. And those devices are indeed devices, not PCs, especially the ones that are running Windows RT, the ARM-based version of Windows 8.

And while current Ivy Bridge-based tablets have loud fans and get middling battery life, 2013 should see the end of those issues thanks to new generation Intel chipsets that will provide the same PC/device melding in hardware that Windows 8 does in software. Battery life will improve, thinner and light form factors will appear, and cloud computing has emerged to offset the relatively low onboard storage of such devices.

Still. You have to be a bit concerned that we’ve been down this road before. Were the lessons learned?

This morning, I coincidentally wrote about my experience of deleting old optical disc- and hard drive-based backups in Zero Data: The Hardest Part is Saying Goodbye. I spent a good amount of time looking at old backups, and I actually found a few things I’d written years ago about the Tablet PC, not for Penton/Windows IT Pro, but one-off articles for the education market. And while I probably shouldn’t reproduce them in full here, I will provide a few relevant sections that are interesting in retrospect and germane to this discussion.

In the original, unedited version of a 2002 article for Thomson IT Link Magazine, I identified some early problems with Tablet PC:

“Imagine … everyone has a Tablet PC. So you might take your Tablet PC to a meeting or class, and take several pages of handwritten notes, which you then share with me. But why would I want notes in your handwriting? I can barely read my own handwriting. If you had typed the notes, they would be instantly accessible to anyone. But with handwriting, we must suffer through the differences in writing styles and clarity. Thanks to decades of computer usage, most people don't have very good handwriting … In short, Digital Ink falls apart when you need to share data. And in an interconnected world, easily sharing data is a necessity.”

“So is the Tablet PC an exciting new platform, full of promise, or a weak first attempt at capitalizing on a long sought-after dream? Like most Microsoft products, it might be best to wait for a future revision, but the convertible tablet devices are most interesting today because they can be used as a normal laptop if all else fails.”

One interesting tidbit about this article: The word “touch” doesn’t appear once: Tablet PCs were designed around the stylus, not the finger.

In another article about software obsolescence from 2003—which, intriguingly mentions Microsoft’s desire to get all customers on subscription plans, something that is only just now starting to happen—I voice hope that the second generation of Tablet PC devices and software will be more successful.

“Tablet PCs have been slow sellers in the marketplace for a variety of reasons, including poor performance and battery life. But with a second generation of more viable Tablet PCs hitting the streets in late 2003, the market for these devices is set to explode. Predictably, Microsoft is also prepping a new update to its XP Tablet PC Edition software.”

Set to explode, indeed. :) More like “implode.” Anyway…

“However, XP Tablet PC Edition 2004--due in Spring 2004--will be a free upgrade to all current Tablet PC owners and will offer only minor changes over the original software. That's good for early adopters, but it also means that people looking to purchase Tablet PCs today don't need to wait for the software revision to buy. Those that did purchase first generation Tablet PCs last year, however, face a different kind of obsolescence--hardware obsolescence--because those products were woefully underpowered to begin with, and no amount of software improvement can change that condition.”

This, I think, will be an issue for people who purchase(d) first generation Windows RT-based devices like Surface with Windows RT. (And, to a much lesser extent, those with Clover Trail-based systems as well, which offer some of the same limitations.) The question now, as then, is whether future versions of Windows 8/RT scale equitably to first generation hardware or, in the case of Windows RT especially, are even made available. I’m guessing not.

Anyway, I’m hoping that history doesn’t repeat itself, that Microsoft can this time make Windows into something that does make sense on highly mobile devices. Windows 8 is a good start, and is certainly more in line with what I believe that customers want than was Tablet PC. But those similarities are a bit alarming. They just are.

Discuss this Article 20

cjibo
on Jan 13, 2013

I have been using tablet computers since 2002 as well. I have been back and forth on stylus vs touch. I live in a dual personality world now where I spend 80% of my time on Apple products and the other 20% trying to find the Windows 8 hardware that makes the best out of the experience. I personally think the one deciding factor of will we relive the dying breed of tablet environment in Windows will be up the OEMs. We need truly innovative hardware. The flip side is Microsoft has to shore up their User Experience. I consider myself a power user. At least I hope I am I develop for these dang things, and my brain still hurts going back and forth between Windows Store (Metro) Apps and desktop mode. Multi-monitor support fails also currently. Why can I not have two windows 8 (Metro) Apps running at the same time when I have two or more monitors. [Maybe I missed some secret sauce there].

Lenovo seems to be making a deep dive into Windows 8 devices. The most promising to me is the Helix right now. I think touch + Stylus is the way to go. I agree that handwriting falls apart in sharing but drawing things on the other hand is completely usable to share.

The only thing we can be certain of is that we are going to live in a world where software will have to work across multiple devices and operating system. I currently carry a Macbook Pro with Windows 7 and 8 Vms, an iPad, an Android Phone, a Nexus 7, and a Windows 8 convertible. Consumers don't necessarily care about the operating system anymore they care about the apps. Where ever the Apps live is where the users will go. If the Apps are all Web based the user will go for the device that gives them the most and where the operating system stays out of the way.

I have not seen that many innovating apps on Windows 8 yet. Let me know when they show up.

Dagrepont
on Jan 14, 2013

What innovating apps exist on the other platforms that don't exist on Windows 8? And please don't say Instagram.

Lopan
on Jan 15, 2013

On Surface RT specifically here is my list after using Surface RT for a few weeks. Google voice, Evernote (that actually sync's without crashing),Podcasting app (that doesn't inexplicably stop playback, I'm talking about you "Podcasts!"), decent twitter client, decent facebook client, turn by turn maps with GPS, photo management (or viewing for that matter) software, simple video editing software, any game that doesn't lag,
On the other hand, it has the right screen size, almost perfect hardware design (for me), weight, great battery life 7-8 hours (for me), excellent touch response, great Touch cover keyboard, excellent movie (Netflix) watching experience for a tablet, web standard compliant and nice web browser, good VOIP and video conference (Skype), and portability.
And believe it or not allot people do have that one app they can't live without. For some it might be Instagram, for me it's Evernote. Evernote runs like a dream on Win 8 x86/x64 with some limitations, but on Windows RT... it's a total piece of crap, crashing every time it sync’s and never completes.
I like The Surface RT for what it is, but don't kid yourself if you think that the MS Windows 8 vision (which Surface RT is by the way in Metro) is somehow at this present time complete... because brother it sure ain't.

Mekon
on Jan 13, 2013

Paul, you are usually right on the mark about these things, but you really missed it here; the biggest problem with the tablet PCs was that the Office never believed in the tablet PC platform, and therefore never created a great version of office that supported the pen.

As you know, the hostility between the Office and Windows team was in the past legendary. "Users love Office but hate windows" was commonly heard in the corridors of the Office team.

So, the tablet team was never able to convince the Office team to spend the resources to really support the pen, so the experience using Office on a tablet PC was very clunky (except for OneNote), and so the tablet PC went the way of the dodo.

Without great support from Office,Windows 8 will not be successful. I find it amazing that Office has not released a great touch/modern UI/metro version of Office yet. Perhaps that is in the wings, perhaps not. We'll see. When and if that version comes out will tell us all we need to know about what the Office team thinks about the viability of touch and productivity apps on Windows 8.

GoodThings2Life
on Jan 13, 2013

I believe there are several key differences between now and the past generation of Tablet PC's:

1. People. Technology was still in an child-like state for most people... They used them as part of work or school efforts and were just getting started with using them for "fun", and fun required far more know-how than most people had. As such, we weren't willing to live life on the "technological fringes" with new form factors. Today, people are much more willing to embrace new tech if it promises to simplify their ability to have "fun" with it.

2. Hardware. The hardware, as you mentioned, wasn't sophisticated enough at the time. It was heavy, bulky, and had limited mobile functionality... and limited as a desktop solution. Of course, that's changed over the years, but I fear that even today battery life is still a huge limitation. Today, the hardware comes in many variations based on the functional purpose intended.

3. Software. The software has always been good in terms of the OS. It has always been possible to use it pretty effectively, but applications have always been lacking. Developers stick to archaic UI development concepts for "familiarity" sake, and that has hindered adoption of newer, touch/pen friendly concepts. Today, this is happening on so many platforms and at such a rapid pace that it's suicide for a developer to ignore.

I think the combination (and Microsoft's unified approach across platforms) will ultimately help them... but it's going to take time to stabilize. We seem to forget that this transition has happened over 5 years now (since the iPhone launch), as if we expect Microsoft Surface to show up and in one business quarter lay waste to all competition in its path. Even Android took a few years to overtake Apple, and they've had to play dirty to achieve that goal. Microsoft can't afford to play dirty anymore, so all they can do is gradually push the "best of" approach.

rob_kellington
on Jan 13, 2013

I agree with Mekon - the Office Team has shown no evidence that they want to do anything but the desktop applications they always have (NOT apps).

Is there any Metro style app that might be considered "benchmark" - that shows off the benefits of Win8 ?

Mekon
on Jan 13, 2013

Actually, I don't think this is quite true. There has been long rumored that the Office team has an iPad version pretty much ready to go (they are certainly actively working on something); again, think of Office as a separate company, they have to be salivating over the wide-open market for productivity apps on the 100+ million iPads out there.

People are clamoring for Office on the iPad; that and the pathetic state of the existing productivity apps on the iPad would be mean that Office would pretty much own the productivity space on the iPad if they ever release their iPad version.

What would happen to Windows 8 on tablets if this ever happens? I don't know, but it can't be a happy scenario for the Windows team.

pmbAustin
on Jan 14, 2013

Check out the Windows 8 "Metro" version of OneNote. Seriously.

jhoff80
on Jan 14, 2013

You mean the version that removes all of the features that are actually good about OneNote? The same version that doesn't even let you change pen color or use a highlighter?

superface
on Jan 13, 2013

I loved my HP TC1100 back in the day. I've still got it now although I don't use it anymore. For its time it was awesome but I have to agree with Mekon the biggest problem was the lack of support in office. Instead of directly being able to write on the page in word or in a cell in excel you had to write in a stupid pen only text box.

Steve job apparently once said "If you see a stylus, they blew it" which i think is true if the stylus is meant to be a mouse replacement but when the stylus is a pen replacement like in onenote 2013 I think styluses are awesome

Timo47
on Jan 13, 2013

I own the TC1100 you have pictured in your article (currently running Windows 8 on it). It's arguably one of the most inovative designs to come out of the tablet pc era. And it was part of HP's BUSINESS lineup. That alone is a clear indicator of how Microsoft and Apple approached the tablet market from a completely different angle. Apple went straight for the consumer with simple devices. Microsoft went for businesses and vertical markets. This also explains why Microsoft's efforts never reached a critical mass. That and the ridiculously high prices of these tablet pc's.

One thing is clearly different now: Windows 8 is targetted at consumers first and businesses second. However, I'm still not seeing any devices in stores. So OEM's need to step it up and get things in the hands of consumers.
That's one big issue that should hopefully get resolved in the coming months.

I also agree with cjibo that a big problem is the current lack of worthy apps for Windows 8. It's a problem because only these app's are suited for a range of devices I'm not seeing at all at this point. The current focus with Windows 8 devices is almost exclusively on devices that can both be a PC and a tablet. While that may be what you and I are looking for it will hinder MS and it's partners in a significant way: price. There's no way that these devices that can do both effectively will be able to undercut prices of the iPad or equal those of the cheaper Android devices. So for MS to succeed there also needs to be a range of simple, cheap 7/10 inch Windows 8 tablets out there. Ment strictly to be used as consumption device.

There may come a time where chipsets will be powerful enough to make the tablet/pc devices discussion irrelevant. But we're not there yet and MS and it's partners cannot afford to wait for that.

Even Sufarce RT is being advertised with a keyboard. I would have reserved that stritly for Surface Pro. It keeps the impression alive that Windows 8 = PC and not tablet.

developer
on Jan 13, 2013

I think Windows users (I was a Windows fan, not long ago), tend to like flexibility and freedom more, than Mac users.

Apart from being able to install Linux for example, they like to be able to install the Windows version they prefer, the Office suite and version they like, etc. This includes future versions too.

So noone knowing how to install Windows, is going to buy a locked down machine, if they can.

As Stallman says, "Jail breaking" is called this for a reason.

It is a essentially a hardware jail, not giving its users a different option (for example, to install Windows 9 in the future). PCs always have been about flexibility.

That's why I do not think there are going to be many Surface sales.

About Windows 8 and other tablets success, it remains to be seen.

SamR
on Jan 13, 2013

I have been terrible at spotting trends and their significance over that last few decades since I used an original IBM PC with two floppies. Why for example I did not buy a few key domains in the early 1990s is beyond me.

Anyway, when I saw the iPad I knew it was the future, 10 hours battery life straight out the starting gate, fast and responsive UI and cellular data. Come-on ! That was a game changer at a crazy low price. Everyone else gave up and went back to the drawing board for almost two years.

Bill Gates may have championed tablets since the early 2000s but what HE imagined tablets as being THEN and what WE recognise as tablets NOW are two totally different things. What he basically championed was crude touch control for $3000 laptops not tablets per se.

Windows RT tablets have a long way to go. As you or Leo said on one of your podcasts, forr a new starter to beat an established incumbent they need to be ten times better. Well the RT tablet not anywhere as good as an iPad yet and may not even be better than the best full Windows 8 tablet.

multiplatform
on Jan 14, 2013

The nice thing about Windows that Apple can't duplicate is that it can do business with business hardware (barcode scanners, thermal printers, POS hardware, etc). It is a HUGE business. When Motorola bought Symbol and Google bought Motorola, I thought all those enterprise business devices would move from WinMobile to Android in short order but they never did (I think I remember you mentioning the Google purchase was only for the patents and the evidence bears you out).

As a device programmer, I am still supporting WinMobile 5.x and 6.x with no way forward. My hope is that Windows 8/RT will allow us to use real devices in a way that Apple/Android devices only do in the cheesiest way. If it does, IT departments will want integrated environments (Win servers), and then desktops, and the workers that use them will want home environments that match their professional training. It is a larger ecosystem that can eclipse the smaller consumer ecosystems offered by Apple and Google. The problem is that Microsoft and their vendors have to deliver devices sufficient to the task of enterprise device computing while still providing music, games, and consumer apps. I feel like we are all waiting to see who can step up to the plate to complete the cycle. Microsoft is better equipped to encompass the larger ecosystem, but they are fiddling. If Google/Motorola wakes up, things could change quickly.

qbob
on Jan 14, 2013

The Tablet PC was only ever a premium device aimed at market where cost was no object and held zero interest for 99% of developers, including myself despite my long standing interest in touch interfaces. The original table-sized Surface (Windows for Millionaires) took another leap into irrelevance. Developer reception of Surface RT and similar may be lukewarm but its a different situation to the old tablet. I fully expect to be ensuring web site developments I'm involved with are Windows 8/RT touch friendly and in the C#/C++ space likely to be releasing Windows store apps in 2013.

I think you are spot on with the first generation Clover Trail and RT devices however, I'd be surprised if obsolescence doesn't rear its ugly head in a couple of years if not before. Not only Windows itself but many of the more interesting apps. On the ARM side, Microsoft missed the boat by not getting Windows RT into the hands of developers last year. The privilege of being able to buy the Surface RT at a premium price and watching the ads. on TV was not enough, at least for me and apparently millions of other developers who remain in the wait and see mode. I suspect when the new generation of devices come out this year and Microsoft get around to promoting the platform to developers that will change but then we'll be designing to 2013 devices, not the first generation. Not so different to the situation with the original iPad and Android tablets.

One aspect of 2002 is back then we expected notebook PCs to go obsolete in around 3 years whereas now we are used to 5-6 years or more. Tablets are currently more of a 2-3 year deal so interesting to see how consumer perceptions pan out now we have the PC tablet collision. Similarities, yes, but a whole different world.

red77star
on Jan 14, 2013

Tablet wanna be production scenario will never happen. I find Tablets rather useless devices. If you are not into NetFlix, Facebook and other things Tablet is not for you cause for anything else is pile of #$%%^...simply unusable whatever you put into it. It is the nature of device. I find Samsung Galaxy Note II much better idea.

jimbie882
on Jan 14, 2013

When you write your article with sentences like "But these issues were fixed over time" and "You have to be a bit concerned that we’ve been down this road before.", you have to be more aware that these issues haven't been fixed yet. We are still waiting for Microsoft, Intel, and OEMs to finally fix the shortcomings of the Table PC. The first Surface Pro is still 2 weeks away. This is more than 10 years from the first Table PC. History is still in the making.

While history is still waiting for a true Table PC, ARM continues to make its impact on the PC market by taking away marketshare.

You wrote "It just ran Windows and its applications really slowly. You know, just like ARM does today.", which is a cop-out. This is clearly where Microsoft didn't adapt to technology more suitable to mobile devices that use ARM. They finally realized their mistake and adapted Windows and Office to use ARM.

Microsoft needs to port most applications to ARM. It needs to be the example for all software companies to show how more complex applications can be done for the Windows RT OS. As ARM advances in speed and complexity, the software can scale to take advantage of such power, then it is clear that ARM is the future and the likes of Intel is less favored.

js8229
on Jan 14, 2013

I always enjoyed my tablet PC devices (I had the 1100 HP you're showing, plus the Lenovo x61t/x200t/x220t and at least one Fujitsu Lifebook T5220) and I found them a pleasure to use. They were great for notes, designing, sketching and surfing sans keyboard.

The biggest issue I had with them was always the cost--any of them seemed to be far over $2K while their "regular" laptop counterparts were substantially cheaper. I think if the cost had been lower initially, more users would have tried the tablet in the first place and perhaps something more would have taken off.

In an odd twist, however, my current tablet PC running Windows 8 has lost the ability to manage a stylus (I cannot turn off multitouch) so now I'm faced with either using the latest Windows 8 or regaining my tablet PC usefulness with WIndows 7.

StephenPAdams
on Jan 14, 2013

I think the difference now versus then is the vested interest Microsoft has in the success of a touch based OS and a viable ecosystem.

It's 3 fold, really. If you look back to the days of the tablet PC, it really didn't have any competition. OS/X was only on version 10.2 (See: Jaguar) and there really wasn't much innovation/competition coming out of Apple.

Flash forward to today and if you divide the current market in to 3 segments: desktop, tablet, and phone....MS is at a significant disadvantage in 2 of them (tablet and phone). While I do think tablet is going to be a strong suit for MS (eventually), there are reasons why that this is a different era for MS versus 2002 (back to the 3 fold comment):

1. Needing the success of the Windows Store, i.e. central app location, distribution channel with payouts (20%-30% for MS) for both MS and developer. Needing the success of Windows 8 and the Windows Store Apps. In a nutshell, the more Windows 8 products sold, the more downloads from the Windows Store. The more downloads from the Windows Store (and more products sold), the more developers will develop for the platform.

2. The success of Windows 8 coupled with their services (Music, Video, SkyDrive, Skype, etc.) should help boost Windows Phone 8. Microsoft is essentially in defense mode on all 3 fronts, even though they have the marketshare for desktop to carry them far. And, FWIW, MS has historically never been in defense mode. At least not in the last decade+.

3. The success of Surface. MS intentionally created a small production run of Surfaces to: gauge reaction to the hardware as well as to the software (RT). This isn't a one trick pony, but really a setup for the future Surface family...and to also put MS in a situation where they are the go to place for PC hardware.

Basically Microsoft is not only invested in the PC market (as in 2002) because of software licenses...but because of hardware premiums as well. Notice the cost of the Surface RT. This wasn't priced at cut-throat rates to just push devices in the hands of consumers like Google is doing with their Nexus line of products. No, this is intentionally done to make Microsoft look like a more premium brand like Apple.

Now, will that work? I don't know. But there is a certain buzz about Microsoft for once....that they're actually cool for once. And usually when you have that image, you can sell devices for a premium.

The number of Microsoft Stores is increasing. Finally the number of supply channels is increasing. Now, MS needs the number of choices to increase. Reasonably, of course.

Using a quick script, I count about 251 stores on Apple's Store listing (in the US).

For comparison's sake, Mary Jo stated on July 11th, 2012 that MS is aiming for 44 by end of 2013. And I believe that contains a few intentional stores as well. That's an order of nearly 6 times less than Apple.

So, Microsoft is vested in hardware (for PC's) for once. And they need to keep on trucking. They managed to sell 5 times as many Windows Phones in Q4 2012 versus Q4 2011. I think they can push the Surface brand as well.

John Barone
on Jan 15, 2013

I think you're spot on here. I purchased a Gateway CX-120 some years ago (still have it) for my daughter. While it was good for some things, it really wasn't good enough to be a "goto" PC. It was a bit slow (though improved somewhat with RAM and HD upgrades) and the screen wasn't all that impressive compared to other laptops of the day (which was sad because you interact with the screen). Not to mention that it was heavy and hot if you carry it around. On top of that, the touch experience (actually stylus experience) wasn't all what it was cracked up to be. The pen was something to lose, and constantly trying to be precise to hit tiny points. At some point I simply gave my daughter a standard laptop (a Vaio) and took the convertible off her hands.

Now I put Windows 8 on it, and it serves a useful life as a late-night Netflix player and lite browsing and Metro use machine.

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