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NewsMicrosoft Store on
Video: A Quick Peek Inside the Microsoft Store

Posted 10/22/2009 at 04:35:48pm

The design and layout of the new Microsoft Store is a near copy of the typical Apple Store. About 1,000 people had already visited by 11:30 AM when I made it through the doors. The line had been quite long when I arrived at 10:20 AM. There was a good selection of hardware from HP, Lenovo, Dell, Sony and Acer among others, with the familiar tables grouped by All-in-ones, netbooks and notebooks. Several Surface machines were scattered through the store and attracted a lot of attention along with the new touchscreen all-in-ones. I liked the look of the new Lenovo all-in-one, but HP has matured the touchscreen interface more than others. The all-aluminum Dell Adamo laptop was a good Mac Air clone at a better price point, at $1,400 some dollars with a 128 GB SSD hard drive. I looked for a Neo-based netbook, but all I found were various Atom powered machines. I did not find any home theater focused machines, but I also did not look everywhere with the crowds quite dense. I like that most Windows machines offer HDMI out for easy connections to consumer electronic devices, especially large screen TVs. We use my wife's HP laptop for streaming video content such as Hulu or Netflix to our big screen TV. My Mac Air is not as convenient for streaming with its micro DVI and weaker graphics chip (newer Airs have more graphic power and Display port, but still not HDMI). I'm interested in a small dedicated machine for the home theater, but have waited for Win 7. I really like ATI's new 5800 series graphics chip, so will look for something with that eventually. I wanted to look at the new Zune HD but that table was pretty crowded and decided to do it another time. I have a copy of Win 7 Ultimate via Launch Party that I'm quite pleased with. I bought a family upgrade pack for other machines in the household and checkout was also similar to Apple Store's with staff carrying portable machines that can print a receipt or send one via e-mail. I took mine via e-mail. Earlier folks in line got more "treats". My gift bag had a metal sport water bottle painted black with Microsoft in bold, a small box of mints and a chapstick. I heard earlier bags held $25 coupons and that the earliest received door prizes. Staff worked the long line handing out Cliff bars and water bottles and Bing t-shirts. The age of folks in line was not self-obvious. With Ashley Tisdale as the concert attraction, you might expect the age to skew young, but there were plenty of retirees mixed in with a variety of working age adults, and nearly as many women as men by my guestimate.

I'll try and make it back to the Ashley Tisdale councert at 5:00 (from Disney's High School Musical). I'm a bit old to be gaga over Ashley, but I did thoroughly enjoy the High School Musical movies. They were cute and fun movies.  Ashley had the more challenging role in the movies as the nominal villan, albeit talented and mostly just bumbling self-absorbed villany. She's a good singer in or out of character. I suspect there will be younger fans more thrilled to see her, but the local Scottsdale Fashion Mall will appreciate the added traffic brought in by the new Microsoft Store.

 I asked how they selected which partner's machines to showcase, and a manager shared they try to take a good sampling at various price points, particularly new and interesting machines.

NewsPlanning to attend on
Microsoft's Retail Opening Confirmed for Thursday

Posted 10/19/2009 at 09:24:47pm

I'm in North Phoenix, running Win7 64 on an upgraded Gateway DX4300-03 WinVista 64 desktop (thanks to Launch Party).

So far I'm liking Win7. Install was time consuming with some required uninstalls and reinstalls, but I didn't lose the functionality of any peripherals or software (a first with Windows). Start-up time is no better, but Win7 handles large folders and large files much better than WinVista.

I also have Macs in the household and have used Apple's retail store system (with both good and bad experiences). I'm curious to see how Microsoft translates the concept that works for a hardware company that also sells software to increase product differentiation of its hardware (Apple) to a software company installed on other firms' hardware (Microsoft).

Win7 is a winner. I'm curioius about the Microsoft Retail Store concept so I'll go look.

Makes sense on
Palm Cancels Foleo

Posted 09/06/2007 at 11:36:38am

I read the blog and the rationale was based more on focusing limited development resources on the next Palm platform rather than continuing a project that while promising is based on a separate platform. I've used Palm Treos since the first flip-phone model and am a likely candidate for the Foleo. My Thinkpad Tablet is great at some things, but soooo slow on start-up. I could make an argument for the Foleo as a customer. As a business, the need to succeed on the new platform is central to Palm's continued existence. Focus on the essentials is a good business answer that I respect.

FeaturesLinux Ubuntu on Gateway MT6840 laptop on
You Can Switch to Linux!

Posted 07/02/2007 at 03:39:38pm

I really appreciate the coverage of Linux. I trust Maximum PC as my leading source for both hardware and software. I can't say I'm thrilled with Vista so far, so experimenting with Linux makes sense. Ubuntu installed easily and does the basics as well or better than Vista. Neither Ubuntu or Vista yet supports all my old printers and other peripherals and probably never will, but if enough people have Linux, future products will have to come with a Linux driver and software, just as most do for both Windows and Mac now. Not sure if for my personal computer I'd end up in the Linux camp, but it certainly makes increasing sense for my corporate computers running Google Apps or the like.

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