Neil Hand, the executive in charge of Dell's
tablet business, shows off the company's new devices during an event Wednesday
in New York. They don't include any Windows RT products.
(Credit: Shara Tibken/CNET)
(Credit: Shara Tibken/CNET)
NEW YORK -- Microsoft's
Windows RT operating system just lost another proponent.
Neil
Hand, head of tablets at Dell, on Wednesday said his company won't be releasing
a new Windows RT device to follow up its XPS 10 device from
a year ago.
"We
are not planning to refesh our current line of RT products," Hand said at a Dell tablet and PC launch event
here. "We're really focused on full Windows products. ...The
full Windows experience provides great capability."
Windows
RT is the version of Microsoft's operating system that runs on chips typically
used in cell phones. The software has failed to gain traction with users, in
part because traditional Windows programs won't run on the operating system.
Many companies have dropped Windows RT in favor of full Windows 8Surfacetablet
running RT.
Microsoft
has tightly controlled the
development process for Windows RT devices, limiting the number of
companies the chipmakers could work with, in order to make better products.
That's meant that few products have hit the market, and some companies in the
initial development program ultimately decided to abandon Windows RT.
Hewlett-Packard
and Toshiba, for instance, never brought their Windows RT products to market,
andSamsung never released
its Windows RT device in the US. At this point, it appears that only
Microsoft continues to push Windows RT.
We've contacted Microsoft
for comment and will update the report when we have more information.
Hand
told CNET in April that Windows RT sales were
lower than expected. At that time, however, he said Dell remained
committed to Windows RT and said it was working on future products.
Hand on Wednesday told CNET
that Dell is phasing out its current Windows RT product, the XPS 10. All
inventory is gone in the US, and it's only a matter of weeks before the device
sells out in the rest of the world, he said.
"We are very good at
understanding our true customer demand and adjusting our supply chain to fit
that in real time," Hand said.'
Dell on Wednesday released a couple of new
Android tablets, including the Dell Venue 7.
(Credit: James Martin/CNET)
(Credit: James Martin/CNET)
Microsoft,
meanwhile, took a charge of US$900 million earlier
this year for excess Surface RT inventory,
parts, and accessories. The company overestimated how many tablets it
would sell, hurting its financial results. It continues to offer the first
version of its Surface RT device at a discounted rate alongside thesecond-generation product and
the new Windows 8.1 Surface Pro.
Hand and Sam Burd, vice
president of Dell's PC business, blamed a lack of apps as one factor that hurt
Windows RT, as well as its inability to run traditional Windows programs. In
addition, Dell can now offer full Windows products for the same price as its
Windows RT product, making the RT device less appealing to customers.
"For the same range of
price, you can get a full Windows 8 tablet," Burd said. "If you want
to run the new Windows
8 interface, you can, but you can also run all the old apps as before. That's
hard to compete against. Unless you're [priced] far below that, there's
just not space."
Hand
noted that while Dell's Windows RT product wasn't successful, Dell did learn
how to better price its other Windows products and what accessories to offer.
One of its new Windows 8.1 products
unveiled Wednesday, the Venue 8 Pro,
is priced at US$299, the same level for Dell's older RT device. And theVenue Pro 11 includes
a removable keyboard, much like the keyboard offered with Dell's XPS 10 Windows
RT device.
"I think Microsoft
made a bold move, and sometimes moves like that take quite a long time to
actually happen," Hand said. "It's just not quite ready for us at
this point for us to add more products with RT.
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