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 US$10,000 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.
Originally, Microsoft had said it could take up to five years for a home
version of Surface, but Microsoft is now aiming to have that out in three years'
time, according to an
interview that Microsoft's Tom Gibbons did with
Fortune magazine.
"In the three-year time window, we absolutely see how to get there," Gibbons
told Fortune. "If we can beat that, we'll try to beat that."
But before it can focus on the home market, Microsoft still needs to work on
satisfying the initial customers for the product. When it announced
Surface in May, Microsoft was aiming to have its initial customers with
products in hand by years' end. By the fall, though, CNET News.com reported that
Microsoft was unlikely to meet its goal.
"We're running a couple of months later than I'd like with our deployments,
Gibbons said in the
Fortune interview. "While I was hoping we'd have
something out now, we'll definitely have something out in the next couple of
months."
Via
Crave CNET
To post comments, you need to become a member. It's FREE.