Windows 8 was designed to bridge the gap between tablets and PCs, but left customers cold. What does this mean for Microsoft and Windows 10?
From ZDNet:
From ZDNet:
The stunning, out-of-nowhere success of tablets was making the PC look stodgy and out-of-date, so Microsoft had to show that Windows could still be relevant beyond its traditional desktop home. The company's response was Windows 8, with its colourful tiled interface and the emphasis on Windows as a touchscreen operating system for a new age of computing — a bet-the-company move, according to then-CEO Steve Ballmer.Windows 8: Why Microsofts giant gamble didnt pay off
To reinforce the shift, Microsoft even developed its own new PC-tablet hybrid, the Surface, to show off the potential of the new operating system.