So I read via Slashdot that the head of Dell's consumer business, Jeff Clarke, announced at the Dell World conference that the company would be pulling out of the smartphone business in order to focus on tablets, and specifically Windows 8 tablets.
As the article that Slashdot linked to states, this is a move that makes plenty of sense, as Dell has struggled to keep up with power players like LG and Samsung in the smartphone/Android world, while it's first major foray into the Windows 8 world, the XPS12, has gotten some pretty solid reviews
(and gets featured in Windows 8 commercials because of its cool swiveling screen).
Why swim upstream when you really don't have to, right?
In my mind not only is this great news for folks like me who see the potential of devices like the XPS10 and Surface to run Windows on tablet-friendly ARM based platforms, I think it's pretty savvy on Dell's part. Android and iOS are just too different from Windows to really be fully compatible, especially in the workplace. As long as Microsoft can continue to work at making Windows 8 and RT devices fully compatible with existing work networks and software, RT devices could quickly outpace their older Android and iOS siblings, at least at work.
No, I don't think the Surface is a superior tablet to the iPad, or even the Nexus 7. ICS and iOS just have it beat right now, not only because of their greater app selection, but also because of their polished UIs. With that said, I always had this feeling like I needed some genius app or mobile developer to link my Android devices with the rest of my computing world.
The Surface truly feels different. I haven't figured out the exact way I want everything to fit together (getting more cloud sync ability would be helpful to that end) in my personal tech ecosystem, but I'm already a step ahead of where I was with my Android devices, even though I've owned my RT device for a far shorter period of time.