Asus will continue to build Window 7 tablets, calling Microsoft’s OS a worthy competitor to the Apple iPad and the army of Android tablets on the market. An Asus official told TechRadar that the company gets a lot of inquiries from the consumer and business market for Windows 7 tablets, so it will continue making them as long as that demand remains.
Julie Cheng, a product management specialist at Asus, said her company’s customers “don’t want Apple and they don’t want Android because they just simply want Windows – they’re used to it. There are still demands for Windows solutions.”
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Asus’s broad strategy to meet Windows 7 tablet demands, and also build Android tablets, may help it dominate a niche market, but many in the industry are still highly skeptical of Windows 7’s tablet fit. My PC World colleague Melissa J. Perenson took a look at the potential for Windows 7 tablets outside of vertical business markets and concluded that it’s now or never for these devices, because “once consumers shift to a more visual, finger-friendly operating system, Windows could lose eyeballs permanently — interoperability be damned.” Colleague Jason Cross put it a bit more directly: Windows 7 tablets are a terrible idea.
What do you think? Is there room for Windows 7 in the already-crowded tablet space? Or are Android and iPad (perhaps even webOS?) apps where it’s at?
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