Why Surface RT? Part 1: Multiple Users

The first in a series of articles describing key advantages of Surface RT over iPad

While the iPad has certain ecosystem advantages over the recently-released Surface with Windows RT, Microsoft’s entry does of course edge out the Apple device in some key areas as well. One of them is its support for multiple users.

When you sign-in to an iPad using a surprisingly lengthy and complicated first-run experience, you establish a connection between the device and your iTunes account, which opens you up to Apple’s media content and apps store. But it also binds the device to that one account. This is OK for many individual users, since it’s their iPad and they’re not sharing it with others.

But the Apple model falls apart in two ways. The first is a shared device. And let’s face it, iPads—like the Surface—are expensive, so it shouldn’t be surprising that many families buy one iPad and then share it between multiple people. But since the iPad supports only a single user account—that one iTunes account—there’s no personalized home screens, email, calendar, apps, and games. Everything is shared.

The second is when you have a family with multiple devices. And while you could allow your kids to sign in to their own iPads, iPods, and/or iPhones using their own iTunes accounts, doing so means you’d be purchasing apps and games multiple times, since each is assigned to a single ID. Apple doesn’t support the notion of family accounts, so the alternative is to simply sign-in to each device with your own iTunes account and then send your kids out into the world with the devices. If they don’t know your password, you’re reasonable safe. But it’s ponderous to OK purchases on multiple devices.

Microsoft’s Surface with Windows RT solves the first of these two problems by offering native support for multiple accounts. And while it doesn’t fully solve the second problem, the Microsoft solution still offers some advantages over the iPad.

Multiple users work in Windows RT (Surface RT as well as any other Windows RT devices) exactly as they do in Windows 8. You will generally sign-in to the device with a Microsoft account, and the first such sign-in is granted administrator privileges on the machine. Subsequent Microsoft account sign-ins, as well as new local accounts, are all created as standard users by default, not admins. And you can enable a Guest account on Surface with Windows RT, just as you can in Windows 8.

Surface with Windows RT can also take advantage of the Windows 8 parental controls feature, called Family Safety. This lets you enforce settings related to web browsing, time limits, Windows Store, and desktop applications and games, and you can receive regular activity reports via email to keep track of what your kids are doing online. (To be clear, iPad/iOS has an excellent set of parental control-like Restrictions too.)

When signed in as any standard user, you can perform any admin-level tasks via a User Account Prompt, which lets you provide your admin credentials (user name and password). This provides parents with a quick way to OK certain tasks that are normally not allowed to their children.

Windows RT’s support for multiple user accounts makes it much easier—and safer—to share a single device. The one wrinkle is that Microsoft, like Apple, ties store purchasing to a Microsoft account. So while you could allow each child to use their own account for these purchases, many will prefer to tie all purchases on the device to a single account. And you can do this, by creating individual local accounts for each child, and then linking those accounts to your own Microsoft account.

This is as safe as it is on the iPad because you can require a password to be entered before any purchase is made. And if your crafty child tries to disable this protection, they’ll be prompted for your password. Problem solved. (Assuming your kids don’t know your password. I was a bit shocked to discover last year that my kids did know my iTunes password, which is fairly complex. Apparently, they were paying attention while I tapped it in on their devices. So be careful.)

Put simply, a Surface with Windows RT device gives you the same user account richness you get in mainstream Windows versions but in a fun, iPad-like device that the kids will love. A Surface RT is no more or less expensive than a comparable iPad. But it absolutely offers a better multi-user experience.

Discuss this Article 10

aras
on Nov 10, 2012

Lack of multiuser support is the main reason there is still no tablet in our household. Now, with both Windows 8 and Android 4.2 offering user accounts I’m really tempted.
I’m unconvinced with Surface RT and waiting to see x86 Clovertrail Windows 8 tablets. It will be either one of them or an Android device.

jh
on Nov 10, 2012

"And you can do this, by creating individual local accounts for each child, and then linking those accounts to your own Microsoft account" Confused....how would you do this and still be able to sign in with a local account?

Gabo
on Nov 11, 2012

For each one of your child account, go to the store app, settings and change the account to yours. This will allow you to purchase once under your user and install the app (multiple times) under your kids profiles.

Odgregg
on Nov 10, 2012

This is the main reason I purchased a Surface over any other tablet. It works really well.

You also don't need local accounts to use a single account for the store. Let them login with their Microsoft account and then in the settings for the App Store you can switch to another account and download/install any apps you've purchased. You can leave it set to your account or switch back to theirs so that they can purchase free apps. It will prompt for your password before any purchases by default.

KevinCust
on Nov 10, 2012

This is similar to what I do for app purchases. I'm now looking for a solution to xbox video purchases. If I buy and download a movie to a device, why can't other users of that device watch it? (or at least xbox live gold family members of the purchasing account)

chilero
on Nov 10, 2012

That is one of the first things I did on my Surface. Set up my wife and son with their own accounts and it is working like a charm.

I also noticed that they are not confused or struggling in any way with the RT/Win8 difference. They adjusted very quickly to Windows 8 on their respective desktops as well. I think sometimes the ability of consumers to adapt is underestimated. For the desktops I shared a few of the keyboard shortcuts with them courtesy of your book.

zeblon
on Nov 10, 2012

In my opinion, the way they handle users/accounts/identities is perhaps the biggest thing Microsoft got WRONG with Windows 8/RT. If your account is tied to a Microsoft Account (what used to be called a Live ID), most applications that leverage that identity have no way to log in under a different identity. For example, the XBox Music app will automatically log you in using the same identity as your Windows account, and does not permit you to log in as anyone else. Have an XBox Music Pass subscription tied to a shared family account? Tough, you can't use it when logged in to Windows under your personal, non-shared identity, and neither can anyone else. The way to solve the problem is to make your account local (not tied to a Live ID). Then you can log in to each app under a different identity, but you lose account synchronization and other goodies that come with a Microsoft account. I suspect a lot of families are like mine - multiple people sharing multiple devices. This is precisely the scenario account synchronization was supposed to address, but Microsoft got accounts and identities just wrong enough to make the new features unusable for us.

ericesque
on Nov 12, 2012

You actually can buy apps once and use them on multiple users' iOS devices. All you have to do is connect all devices to the iTunes Store with the same Apple ID and make app purchases through that account. Then on each device, connect iCloud to the unique user's Apple ID.

Maczin
on Nov 14, 2012

An ipad is built on open source technology while surface is built on windows. That can be both a risk and an advantage.

Ken007
on Nov 17, 2012

It is a cost savings to have the family share purchased apps like on the ipad or android. The savings is quickly eaten up when a grandchild makes a few in app purchases that you don't know about. Separate accounts and a guest account is a real benefit.

Please or Register to post comments.

IT/Dev Connections

Las Vegas
September 30th - October 4th

Paul ThurottYou'll have the opportunity to experience:
• 120 Technical
Sessions
• Networking with Peers
• Expert Speakers


Come See Paul Thurrott & Mary Jo Foley in Person!

Register Now

Office 365 InfoCenter

Get the latest insight and info from Paul

Read Now!

What I Use