Samsung will build a quad-core tablet for the upcoming Windows 8, according to a new report. Microsoft plans on making Windows 8 tablet-optimized.
Samsung is building a tablet running Windows 8, according to
a report in the Korea Economic Daily.
That
publication cites an unnamed industry source for its information, and adds
that the tablet will make an appearance at Microsoft's BUILD conference in
Anaheim, Calif., which is scheduled to kick off Sept. 13. Microsoft already
plans to show off some aspects of Windows 8 at the conference.
Rumors have circulated for some time that Microsoft plans on
offering BUILD attendees a quad-core tablet loaded with a test build of Windows
8. This newest report adds some credence to that scuttlebutt.
Although Windows 8 will most likely appear sometime in 2012,
Microsoft is already ramping up marketing and outreach for the next-generation
operating system. For weeks, the company has offered glimpses of the developing
features and user interface via its official
"Building
Windows 8" blog.
Windows 8 will offer a touch-centric environment for tablets,
coexisting peacefully with a desktop interface. The seamless ability to switch
between the two, Microsoft hopes, will allow Windows to maintain its longtime
dominance of the traditional operating-system market, while making inroads into
tablets.
Windows 8 features include USB 3.0 support and the ability
to run multiple virtualized operating systems on the same physical machine.
Microsoft is also using the blog to counteract early criticism. Windows and
Windows Live Division President Steven Sinofsky used a Sept. 2 posting
to defend the choice of an updated "ribbon" interface for Windows 8's version
of Windows Explorer.
"We chose the ribbon mechanism, and to those that find that
a flawed choice, there isn't much we can do other than disagree," Sinofsky
wrote. "We were certain, and this proved out, that the dislike of the ribbon is
most intense in the audience of this blog."
He also defended the choice of "Metro" style for Windows 8's
overall look as an opportunity to embrace the new. "We've seen a clear turn
where Aero is the past and Metro is the future," he added. "And with that a
strong desire for the existing Windows experience to take on a new look or a
Metro redesign." The "Aero" aesthetic informed the look of both Windows Vista
and Windows 7, and emphasized design elements such as translucent panels.
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