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HP Pulling Out of Windows RT Race... Over Surface?

By - Source: SemiAccurate

HP has supposedly bailed out of the Windows RT race while other Microsoft partners are considering the same, thanks to Surface.

If rumors are true, then Microsoft may have just created a few enemies with the introduction of the Surface tablet last week. Sources have told SemiAccurate that a "whole flock" of formerly close Microsoft partners are looking at Google's Android 4.1 "Jelly Bean" as their new best friend. Most are currently debating on whether it will be worth their time to develop Windows RT tablets while Hewlett Packard, Microsoft's biggest OEM, is bailing out altogether.

SemiAccurate paints a dark strategy implemented by Microsoft which paves the way for the supposed OEM rebellion. "Microsoft handcuffed both ARM chipmakers and OEMs with their brilliant two device per chipmaker strategy," the report describes. "Then, they ‘worked closely’ with all the OEMs, ‘helping’ them with their designs. As soon as those designs were essentially finalized, Microsoft did their own device that paid homage to their OEMs most innovative features. It is also a direct competitor to those OEMs, and was designed knowing exactly where their weaknesses were."

The article points out that Microsoft isn't bound by the same restrictions it imposes on OEMs, squashing any possible competition posed by Windows RT partners. The company also increased the price of Windows RT licenses with a "questionably legal monopolistic bundle" to around 3 times that it requires OEMs to pay for the x86 version of Windows 8. Because of these two factors, OEMs can't seemingly compete in the Windows RT arena.

As previously stated, HP and its Qualcomm-based Windows RT machines are supposedly the first to bail. Other industry rumors claim that Windows RT partners are canning one or more designs in light of the Surface reveal last week, and are scraping up every bit of resource they can to renew their Android efforts. This move is likely fueled by Android 4.1's big reveal this week at Google I/O which sports features like the Chrome browser (HTML5 apps?) and Google Now, Siri's new competitor.

"Microsoft’s incompetent management and Apple envy earned the enmity of their largest partner, and others are following closely," SemiAccurate writes. "Like we said, game over for Windows RT."

Is that as bit harsh, or dead on the money? The fact that Microsoft kept Surface a secret until the very last moment should speak volumes about the company's current relationship with OEMs. As for HP bailing out of Windows RT, given the company's rocky status, the gadget may never have been at the forefront of its plans to begin with.

UPDATE: HP confirmed that it has put its Windows RT plans on hold. "The decision to go with x86 was influenced by input from our customers,” HP spokesperson Marlene Somsak wrote in an e-mail to Bloomberg. “The robust and established ecosystem of x86 applications provides the best customer experience at this time and in the immediate future.”

There are 4 Comments.
Other Comments
  • 0
    contrasia , July 3, 2012 8:42 PM
    Definitely getting the apple wannabe vibe from the whole attitude coming from MS.
    Considering how overly colourful the design is, it even looks like they're trying to produce similair aesthetics as apple. They should change Balmer and get someone who actually supports the Microsoft brand, rather than allowing him to screw the business up.
  • 0
    LePhuronn , July 1, 2012 9:55 PM
    Not too concerned here - I think Windows RT is Microsoft doing the "me too" thing on media consumption/toy tablets and are just too late to the party. It's the x86 Surface that could be a gamechanger if the price is right (i.e. knock $200 off the price at least), so it's nice to see HP are sticking with that route.
  • 0
    HEXiT , June 30, 2012 4:08 AM
    looks like microsoft without bill gates is heading into the gutter. it seems like every decision they have made lately has been ill conceived or just plain wrong... i dunno if its steve ballmer not having a clue or the people under him, but something isnt rite. forget asking the users what they want, but instead use there submitted data to figure it out which results in less than half the story. and you have a recipe for a disaster... they need to ask us what we want from our products, not what they think we want. until they do that they are just poking around in the dark hoping to hit a light switch.
    oops the lightswitch was in the start bar....