Windows 8 Pro tablets will be attractive to large corporate customers.
But it won't be easy competing with the iPad, which is gaining traction
at large businesses.
Windows 8 Pro
tablets have a shot at slowing
iPad adoption at large companies, said Deutsche Bank -- though an analyst tempered the assessment with reservations.
Microsoft's Surface tablet running Windows 8 Pro can "leverage" the
large existing base of Windows customers, giving it a better chance at
checking the "penetration" of Apple's iPad at large business accounts,
Deutsche Bank analyst Chris Whitmore wrote in a research note on Monday.
(Credit: Microsoft) |
"We see the x86-based Pro as a corporate [laptop] replacement. This
offering has more potential because the OS is backward compatible, has
more robust security, leverages the existing installed base, and offers
full Office support (and consistent file management). We expect the Pro
(and its forthcoming ilk) will compete directly with touch enabled
ultrabooks / corporate [laptops]. The Pro tablet has the potential to
slow the rate of iPad penetration into enterprise accounts."
But Whitmore quickly qualified this as a "best case scenario" because Microsoft is "swimming upstream against the consumerization of IT," referring to employees who bring their own iPads to work.
The Intel-based Pro version will likely be priced in the range of
$900 to more than $1,000. "Or roughly in line with similarly configured
ultrabooks," he wrote.
That's roughly a 20 percent premium over the most expensive 64GB iPad
with 4G, according to Whitmore. And Windows Pro Surface tablets must
also contend with the iPad's superior battery life and the iPad's large
number of third-party apps, he said.
RT tablets -- built around Windows RT and ARM silicon -- have even less chance against the iPad, Whitmore said.
"We see Windows RT struggling because the platform has: 1) limited 3rd
party apps 2) no backward compatibility with existing PCs 3) a price
point that will likely be higher than iPad 4) unclear 4G/carrier support
and 5) uncertainty which version of Office will be supported (reports
suggest it will not be enterprise ready). To put it bluntly, if the
Surface is not priced below the iPad we see few compelling reasons for
consumers to choose RT over iPad. The iPad is in its third generation,
has broad and deep App support, iTunes/iOS/iCloud lock in (content,
pictures etc) and high customer satisfaction."
Below is a Deutsche Bank breakdown of iPad and Surface tablet pricing and configurations.
(Credit: Deutsche Bank) |
By courtesy of: Brooke Crothers
Source
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