Tuesday, 10 July 2012

Samsung working on a tablet that will run on Windows RT.

Samsung will be among the first to launch a Windows tablet running on arm -based processors rather than Intel, reports claim.Samsung tablet running the existing Windows & software have long been Microsoft 's  devoured way of demonstrating its opening system's touch interface . for the release of Windows 8 , however new tablets will also be released using  Arm's lower powered chips, upon which the i pad is ultimately based .
           
        The new tablet will run a version of Windows 8 called Windows RT that is optimized for  touchscreen and only offers the 'Metro' browsing interface that is similar to that used on Windows phone .
                 The samsung tablets will be released when Windows 8 itself is unveiled  in October , Bloomberg reported . They will boost Microsoft's continuing bid to get into a tablet market that is dominated by Apple's  iPad , which snipped more than half the entire market in the last quarter .
                 the 11.8 million iPads shipped represented a 58% share, according to researcher IHS ISuppli Inc .
  samsung was second , with 11% , thanks to a mix of Windows 7 and Google Android devices , while Amazon,s Kindle fire took 5.8%
       
        HP has confirmed that  it will not, however , be backing Windows RT initially, instead sticking with  traditional . Intel based Windows . Bloomberg added that Samsung's Windows RT tablet will feature QUALCOMM's Snapdragon processor .
       

                    In an Indication of how important Microsoft consider the tablet market to be , it also recently announced that it is to make its own tablet, called the Surface. Although the device was apparently impressive , reviewers were not able to use it extensively , and manufacturing partners have suggested that Microsoft's decision to make its own devices could compromise the existing relationships.
   
   Itel has announced that it had secured first refusal on touchscreen orders with four manufacturers .S spokesman for Microsoft , Samsung , Qualcomm and Arm declined t comment ...

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