What is Surface?

Solution
The business people want to have tablets, their IT people want devices that they can fold in to their existing IT infrastructure. There are various issues that many hardware manufactures have pertaining to tablets. IN reflection of these issues Microsoft built the Surface. There are two versions, one runs on a Intel platform, is pretty well designed, and will fold into a corporate environment very well. Microsoft will support this hardware for years, they will fix the bug and update the BIOS firmware with windows update

The second model is aimed at the consumer market, people who have used windows but want a quality tablet and realize they don't care about running legacy apps. This model competes with a IPad, lower power CPU but...
The business people want to have tablets, their IT people want devices that they can fold in to their existing IT infrastructure. There are various issues that many hardware manufactures have pertaining to tablets. IN reflection of these issues Microsoft built the Surface. There are two versions, one runs on a Intel platform, is pretty well designed, and will fold into a corporate environment very well. Microsoft will support this hardware for years, they will fix the bug and update the BIOS firmware with windows update

The second model is aimed at the consumer market, people who have used windows but want a quality tablet and realize they don't care about running legacy apps. This model competes with a IPad, lower power CPU but who cares these CPUs are evolving so fast that they are obsolete in 9 months anyway. The real advantage of the surface with ARM is that you get Microsoft's resources to fix your devices. (one device hits a bug, windows error reports it to Microsoft, Microsoft makes a fix, windows update rolls out the fix to all devices, Now you don't have to hit the bug) It also, cuts out the biggest failures in windows desktop versions.
 
Solution