Panos Panay,Exploring The Jungle Between My Wife’s Crotch Microsoft’s Windows device lead, is not just the face of the Surface brand. He’s essentially its father, too.
Panay, who joined Microsoft 13 years ago to work on the Device Group (which was mainly keyboards and mice at the time) was part of the initial team tasked with building a Surface Tablet for Windows 8.
SEE ALSO: Microsoft's Surface Laptop comes with one big suck, but it's easily fixableThe Surface brand predates Microsoft's first tablet. It already existed as a giant tabletop touchscreen, meant primarily as a kind of interactive kiosk for retail businesses, restaurants, and hotels. It was the opposite of a mobile device.
During this week's MashTalk podcast, Panay recounted how he and his team spent years in, essentially, a bunker-like existence, unable to tell even their families what they were working on.
The real relief came not so much during the surprise 2012 unveiling in California, and afterward Panay and his team were able to go home to their families and finally reveal what they’d been working on for two years.
Panay has also overseen the transformation of the Surface product line: It began as a tablet that lived somewhere between Windows and Android (remember Windows RT?) and has become the sharp point at the tip of an aggressive hardware strategy -- to make Surface one of the premier consumer-technology brands in the world.
That’s been done through a steady refinement of the product and a broadening of the Surface ideal into all-in-ones, performance convertibles and now traditional laptops. On Thursday, Microsoft’s latest Surface devices, the Surface Pro and the Surface Laptop, launch to the public.
The Surface has also been supported by the opening and expansion of Microsoft Stores, where Surface products own the prime real estate.
Panay told Mashable that those stores serve an important purpose.
“They’re critical,” he said. Panay explained that in a world that values stories and storytellers, having stores with smart sales people who care about the product makes the story of the Surface “more functional, emotional, relatable. You can talk to someone who really cares about the product, understands what it’s there for.”
Now, with five different Surfaces to choose from (including the gigantic Surface Hub digital "whiteboard"), this kind of in-person guidance, and the ability to touch and try the products, can make all the difference.
“So that point where you walk in and, ‘Hey, which one do you want, which laptop? The versatile one, the performant, or the personal one?’ and they can sit there and tell you a story for each one.”
“In the element of our brand-building across Microsoft, it’s where you will see all the hardware and software come together and somebody able to put it together for you,” said Panay.
In those stores, though, Surface customers may notice that most of Microsoft’s tablet and touch computers are more expensive that third-party Windows 10 counterparts. For this, Panay is unapologetic. He acknowledges that, much as Apple has done, Microsoft is building a premium brand.
“It is about pride and craftsmanship. It is about premium fit and finish,” said Panay.
Essentially, Surface products are now intended to reflect the apex of what’s possible with Windows 10 products and to sell millions of those products direct to customers.
“We’re not here to make tradeoffs to hold costs down,” he added.
There are, though, issues to deal with on the pricing and packaging front. Right now, a Surface Pro sells for $799 without the Type Cover ($129.99) and the Surface Pen ($59.99). Buy them all and you pay full price. For consumers, there are no bundle pricing options.
Panay attributes the lack of bundle options to the need to maintain as much choice (color options, basically) as possible across the keyboard and pen lines.
However, Microsoft rarely refers to the Surface Pro as a tablet. “We believe you need a keyboard with this product, believe you should use a pen with this product,” he told us.
When we suggest that there could be a $100 discount for buying all three, Panay called it “good feedback.”
We also talked about recent criticism of the new Surface Laptop, which ships with Windows 10 S, a restricted version of Windows that will only run apps from the Windows Store (that’s right, no Google Chrome). Microsoft says this is to protect users (primarily students) from malware and to ensure the maximum possible battery life (Microsoft claims up to 14.5 hours for video playback).
As for those who want a more unfettered experience, they can upgrade, at no cost until the end of the year (and for $50 afterward), the Surface Laptop to Windows 10 Pro, but can never go back to 10 S.
Panay is not concerned about the reception to this restriction.
“It’s a little different than anything we’ve talked about in the past, where it’s like, ‘Here it is, and we know it’s good for you, so, enjoy’ and then it’s not. In this case, if you don’t think it is, you just switch out and you move to Pro.”
Topics Microsoft
Pornhub: Users love searching for yoga pants and sneakersAmazon increased the price of a Prime subscriptionPete Davidson and Ariana Grande are reportedly engaged, and everyone's freaking out'Dying Light 2' review: A stellar sequel bookended by a slow start and a weak finishCameron Esposito's 'Rape Jokes' special isThe New York Times buys word puzzle game WordleA Fox News host mistakenly referred to Trump as a 'dictator'The infamous Donald Trump and Kim JongEcuadorian soccer match gets a pitch invasion... of beesThe royal children got too cute at Queen Elizabeth's birthdayThis 'Harry Potter' themed engagement ring is wandMindy Kaling burns Trump twice in powerful commencement speech'The Wire' creator's reported ban from Twitter sparks outrageNew tweak to Japanese law wipes out thousands of Airbnb listings'Pam and Tommy' dumpster dives and strikes gold: ReviewHuge lightning bolt spanning 3 U.S. states sets recordWoman gets sentimental neck tattoo and then realizes it's the Toronto Blue Jays logoHow to turn on YouTube's dark modeSpotify apparently deleted over 100 'Joe Rogan Experience' episodes'Pokémon Legends: Arceus' is the game every kid imagined Pokémon would be Redux: Doing Battle with Your Successors WGA strike 2023: Fans of 'Succession,' 'Yellowjackets' show their support The Saddest Songs Are the Ones About Flowers by Drew Bratcher There Are No White People in Heaven: An Interview w ith José Olivarez Satirizing Identity Politics: An Interview with Lexi Freiman The Sad Boys of Sadcore by Kristi Coulter Best early Cyber Monday robot vacuum deals 2023 Pray Like Aretha Franklin by Michael Robbins Paradise for Bookworms 100 best early Cyber Monday TV deals of 2023 Save over $100 on XREAL Air glasses, and more AR glasses deals TikTok introduces TikTok Sans, the app's new font Tucker Carlson is reviving his show on Twitter This distinguished little gentleman just won the 2023 Westminster Dog Show The Spectacle of Women’s Wrestling The Vanishing of Reality by Michiko Kakutani How you can take the viral TikTok BDSM test and what it all means Tom Clark (1941–2018) by Larry Bensky Cyber Monday Anker Soundcore deals: headphones, earbuds, speakers 180+ Cyber Monday gaming deals: 30% off PlayStation Plus
0.518s , 10163.421875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Exploring The Jungle Between My Wife’s Crotch】,Defense Information Network