The SmallBizWindows Stardock ModernMix Review

smallbizwindows2Windows 8 Metro.

Windows 8 Desktop.

On the same computer, but, as implemented by Microsoft in Windows 8, you might as well be using them on separate computers linked by a MALP through a stargate!

“Can we all just get along?”

One of the few issues I have with Windows 8, and in particular, Windows 8 Metro apps, is the fact that using any of them turns out to be an either/or proposition.

You either use the app, or you don’t.

The fluidity with which one has gotten accustomed to multitasking in Windows breaks, and startlingly so.

Unfortunately, if you have multiple monitors, this problem is much compounded.

And, I use multiple monitors.

On all my systems, except the lappers.

Finally, and with Windows 8, Microsoft seemed to have come to the realization that regular folks use Windows in multi-monitor situations.

Unfortunately, as is often with Microsoft, in what seems to be a bad case of someone going with Max Romeo and the Upsetters’ One Step Forward, Bad Microsoft comes to fore, and taketh away the goodness of such a discovery by implementing Windows 8 multi-monitor support in a totally half-assed a manner that leaves much to be desired, lousing up what could have been a great user experience.

However, that is a rant for another blog post.

Don’t get me wrong: Windows 8 does multitask both Metro apps and Desktop apps. However, the way it is implemented is nothing short of appalling.

Please don’t tell me that nonsense about pinned apps! That’s all well and good. However, there are some pretty cool Metro apps that folks would like to interact with. However, once you lose focus by concentrating on the desktop, interactivity is lost.

How useful is that?

These days, it seems Microsoft's new position regarding feedback is that they know better, disregarding all user experience fails.

Thankfully, Stardock saw this, and has taken advantage of the opportunity.

Stardock ModernMix is just a jewel of an app.

It brings Windows 8 Metro interactivity to the desktop in ways most users expect Windows 8 expect.

And it works.

It just works!

It works on my HP z600 Personal Workstation and on my Surface Pro device. It works with touch and non-touch Windows 8 PCs. It even works in Windows 8 VMs

I am able to run Metro apps in a Desktop window side-by-side with desktop applications, and better yet, cut-and-paste between them effortlessly.

Best of all, I have been able to eliminate the wasted space of an entire 30” HP ZR30w monitor that I had previously devoted to just Metro apps. This has vastly improved my productivity, and greatly enhanced the desirability, and usefulness, of Windows 8 Metro apps.

This is very good.

It is my belief that this app is one of the products that Microsoft NEEDS in order to make Windows 8 rock. It makes Windows 8 more useful. Immediately.

While it isn’t as polished as other Microsoft Metro apps, or desktop apps for that matter, with some glitches in use, such as having to return apps to Metro mode in order to access their settings and more, there is no doubt in my mind that Microsoft should do their Windows 8 users a great service and buy ModernMix from Stardock, develop and nice it up further, and ultimately slipstream it into a ‘critical’ patch ASAP.

All Windows users will thank you, Redmond.smallbizwindows2

In the interim, ModernMix is the latest recipient of our SmallBizWindows Superstar Award, and I wholeheartedly recommend it to all Windows users.

Many thanks to Stardock’s Spencer Scott (Twitter @islanddog) for this opportunity, and for all his assistance over the past several years on ALL Stardock products. You rock, Double-S!

© 2002 – 2013, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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Re Google Reader: No, Chicken Little, the sky isn’t falling!

What a bunch of moochers!

The big deal this past week, was the decision by Google to sunset Google Reader, the company’s proprietary product designed to replace RSS.

From the amount of noise pollution in the blogosphere, you’d think Google had killed their babies.

Again, what a bunch of moochers!

Prolog: Google & abuse of power
Google entered this market with the same formula: muscle into a space with a solution tied into its eponymous and market-leading search engine. kill the incumbents – or worse, relegate them to irrelevancy, then stretch the bounds of antitrust laws by attempting to tie that product to Google search for monetization. Failing that, the product is dropped like the proverbial hot potato.

Unfortunately, Google’s entry into these markets also scares away further investment in the products occupying that space, and stifles competition due to Google’s deep pockets.

The landscape is littered with Google’s victims. Below, is a representative list of Google’s forays.

When Google exits, everyone suffers.

Act I: Back to the Freeloaders
All over the internet, hipsters and self-styled influentials are all agog over this development.

And I wonder why.

RSS, the standard Google sought to supplant, was created back in 1997, and it still works.

People flocked from RSS to Google Reader because they were lazy.

Too lazy to discover their news themselves, and too lazy to use one of the several RSS feed readers available.

Now, Google Reader has gone away, and the intense hatred for Google generated by that is amazing for one thing: Google Reader was a free product/service.

Seriously, it was free!

Act II: Show Google the money!
So far, there is an online petition hoping to get Google to rescind the death order for Google Reader. That petition has garnered over 100,000 cattle signed on.

Funny enough, the 100,000 moochers haven’t answered this question I posed on Twitter.

gg1

Only my friend Cody Bunch replied that he would.

Now, I am begging the moochers to stop the bloggorhea, and either pay up, or shut up.

To help them in their decision-making process, I give them their choice of any version of the old-time Reggae hit, Hypocrites & Parasites.

This is actually a good development for RSS feed readers, for the people have been burned by what they thought was the panacea for their news reading but it wasn’t so. The renewed focus on pure RSS apps will spur innovation in available readers.

So, as you see, Chicken Little, the sky isn’t falling.

Just whip out some danarii, and pay the piper Google any RSS feed reader ISV!

Epilog: The Aftermath
By the way, the best Windows (desktop) RSS Feed Reader out there is RSS Bandit.

What I’m hoping right now is that the developers of the product would have some free time to develop the product further and maybe get it to sync with SkyDrive. Better yet, maybe link up with a good UI designer and bring a Windows 8 Metro version to market.

That, folks, would be the shizzle!

Related
ZDNet’s Steven J. Vaughn-Nichols: RSS inventor doesn't see what all the fuss is about closing Google Reader

In Memoriam

The Google Apps Who Would Be Internet Kings or Queens

Google Graveyard

© 2002 – 2013, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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Andy Marken’s Content Insider # 272 - Personal Clouds

Andy Marken always has a no-nonsense, down-to-earth perspective on matters, especially storage.

There’s Just Something About Your Storage You Can See, Touch

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“Something came out of the fog and tried to destroy us. In one moment, it vanished.” – Stevie Wayne – “The Fog,” AVCO Embassy Pictures, 1980

We recently switched from posting some of our documents from Google’s Gdrive (not as catchy as iDrive but…) to dropbox. Gdrive had “issues” and if the work doesn’t fit into Google’s agenda, you’re left hanging.

No problem because we don’t store anything in the cloud – either of them – we’re not willing to have them corrupted, lost or “borrowed.”

We take the same approach with our family’s stuff because things happen.

Sure, we all use the cloud – the kids more than the wife and I because they’ve never known life without it. We have.

The cloud is hot, sexy and, according to all the soothsayers, you can store anything safely and access it from anywhere.

Elizabeth Solley was pretty sure she could get her content when she said, “I think I'll go to Vancouver now.”

Of course, there is the fine print; and that’s what can kill your stuff in the cloud.

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Storms Overhead – Your home may be your island for rejuvenation but it is also exposed to disasters that lurk in The Cloud. It is an even bigger problem when you store all of your best, most valuable, impossible to replace family documents, information, images and videos there. When The Cloud darkens and hactivists/cyber-criminals find your content’s location … disaster can strike.

Gartner looked at the SLAs (service level agreements) for most of the business cloud services and to say they found them lacking would be putting it mildly.

And companies are paying for those services, so imagine what that means if you’re using 2-5GB of free storage … not overly promising.

Beyond Loss
But their losing content (or our not being able to find our stuff up there) is only one of the reasons we shy away from the soft, fluffy cloud storage facilities.

Tommy Wallace recognized the issue when he exclaimed, “Hey, there's a fog bank out there.”

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List of Issues – Security continues to be the biggest concern business and individual users have with “taking advantage” of cloud services. Of course, there’s also the fact that like a cloud, it isn’t really understood.

There’s also the little fact that if your 10-100GB of family treasures are located in one of those petabyte cloud warehouses and bad people want to harvest information, where’s the first place they’re going to go … right, the bank, not your mattress.

O.K., in our case it’s not the mattress, it’s a 4TB mirrored home network storage unit plus a second 4TB nearline HD we use for stuff we seldom access but would need to the minute we deleted it.

clip_image008 Rapid Climb – Digital content – music and video – has grown rapidly in the family’s home library, especially with game systems able to stream content and allow people to play it on virtually every device they own. Families also have general backups as well as personal backups that can and must be protected.

Don’t get me wrong, there are a lot of good things about cloud storage and especially for backup.

Cloud storage/backup does make it convenient because you can access the information with any Internet-connected device; information can be shared (as with our Content Insider); they say it has built-in security and it’s pretty easy to manage, search, retrieve and transfer.

Disasters Are Real
The other reason lots of cloud storage sellers like to use (and it’s valid) is if a disaster strikes your home you know your stuff is somewhere safe and you can rebuild your home.

Then there are the questionable aspects, like you’re never really certain you can get the content back if they go out of business or “misplace” your family gems.

Oh, and if some government agency does a wide sweep of your storage service saying to fork it over … they’ll do it, trust me.

Dan O’Bannon found out when he said, “It should be right outside my front door now.”

Don’t forget those Wild West SLAs that have so many ifs, ands, buts that translate into “tough bounce dude/dudette.”

That’s why we use the cloud as a passing, perishable storage option.

There’s also that foggy thing in the cloud called security.

Bad Guys/Gals
David Talbot, who wrote Security in the Ether, points out concerns security and cloud experts have about how vulnerable it really is for information in the cloud.

He summed up the issues by writing, “Not only could stored data be stolen by hackers or lost to breakdowns, but a cloud provider might mishandle data — or be forced to give it up in response to a subpoena.”

So we’ll stick with our home cloud.

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Easy Networking – It has become easier and easier for people to connect all of their devices to their home network, usually over Wi-Fi. While the home network was developed for computers, today it has become the home/family entertainment source.

Sure, the law can come knocking on our home network door; but all they’re going to find is a whole bunch of devices connected to a home cloud that’s just got family stuff … sorry we just don’t have any of that DRM (digital rights management) content.

Nope. Our home storage just contains the normal boring family stuff as well as personal (purchased) music collections, tons of photos/videos, purchased eBooks, video games, private/personal stuff, TV programs we’re gonna’ watch sometime and movies we bought.

Of course, that’s only part of the storage issue because it seems like we spend less and less time at home … everyone in the family is mobile.

The Mobile Family

And we’re not alone.

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Everyone/Everything Connecting – While we only have roughly seven billion people on the planet, don’t think that has stopped the device industry from slapping connectivity on everything possible including shipping containers, remotely operated machines, you name it. The “other” connections far outweigh the smartphones being sold.

Our daughter has her iPhone, iPad and iMac Air while our son on has his iPhone, Kindle Fire and Asus ultrabook (he’s OS agnostic).

I took a quick look at my smartphone and it has 32GB of onboard storage, iPad has 64GB and my ultrabook has 240GB of SSD.

Everyone in the family (including my wife) seem to spend more time on their mobile devices doing data stuff rather than calling people.

clip_image013Connected Family – Today’s family is more connected and they “talk” a lot. O.K., it isn’t vocal; but the family does exchange news, information, ideas. Sometimes that’s enough.

We know you don’t do this, but she and I have been known to text/email each other even when we’re in the same room!

 

Still Have Issues
But with our mobile devices always close at hand (if not in use), we still have “storage issues/paranoia.”

To handle the data explosion and avoid the universal cloud, we have “several” personal clouds.

You probably call them old-fashioned external HDs, but a personal cloud just sounds sexier.

The kids love their little OWC on-the-go Pros because they not only look cool, they hold 500GB of stuff and fit easily in their pocket/backpack with all of mobile devices.

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Personal Cloud – It may not be the fluffy thing that comes to mind when someone says they use their personal cloud but portable storage devices like the On-The-Go Pro can have enough capacity, be rugged enough, be small enough and be safe enough to protect all of your personal information, images, videos, songs from prying eyes.

I still carry around an old LaCie 256GB rugged portable drive that I got years ago. I’m secretly waiting for it to start to die so I can move up from USB 2.0 to one with 3.0 and as much capacity as the kids have.

Well, I may have to wait until the wife gets her personal cloud … we’ll see.

Of course, there’s also the little fact that the kids have been telling us how storage deprived they feel when all of their friends have 1TB portables; so maybe dad will have to wait … again

The one thing I know is that as much as we love SSD in our mobile devices – super fast, pretty darn rugged, great battery life, super light; they just aren’t going to replace the HDs we have around the house and on our person.

And when necessary, or in a pinch, there’s always the cloud.

But it’s still something we approach with caution because…

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As Stevie Wayne warned, To the ships at sea who can hear my voice, look across the water, into the darkness. Look for the fog.”

G. Andy Marken is founder and President of Marken Communications

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Microsoft’s missed TweetDeck Opportunity

Microsoft-new£25 million.

That’s all it took.

Think about it: Microsoft could have had TweetDeck, and all its users for the measly sum – to Microsoft, not me! – of $40 million, or £25 million.

That’s all: £25 million!

However, Microsoft allowed Twitter to purchase the asset.

tweetdeckWhy did TweetDeck matter?

Well, at the time of the purchase, TweetDeck accounted for about 23% of all Twitter traffic. Moreover, at that time (as now), Microsoft’s social media efforts had a recurring engagement at the Toilet Bowl.

You’d have thought that light bulbs would be popping all over the melons of those smart folks at #1 Microsoft Way, in Redmond. None did.

The vig on the deal was that Twitter (the company) was being cautioned by US antitrust authorities about stifling access to Twitter info. Meaning that Microsoft would have been in a position to cry ‘foul’ if and when Twitter tried to close the data spigot.

Access to all those users would have allowed Microsoft to do two things:

1) Put TweetDeck’s userbase to good use by leveraging it in order utilize it as a beachhead in creating its own social network, or

2) Use TweetDeck as a cudgel to pummel Twitter into giving it extremely favorable terms in raw Twitter search data.

At worst, Microsoft could have used it for something. Anything!

Instead, they sat on the sidelines, and Twitter executed a perfect Sun Tzu maneuver, and took a potential rival out of play.thCA7PWM3B

Yesterday, Twitter sounded the death knell for TweetDeck.

In case you are wondering, this sort of missteppin’ isn’t new to Microsoft.

Microsoft is the same company that famously closed its blogging platform, Windows Live Spaces, and gifted 25 million – that pesky figure again! – blogs to WordPress for nothing. Determined to make people forget that mess, Microsoft recently decided to repeat an act of corporate bone-headedness by shutting down Live Mesh (the former FolderShare) and sending all users to LogMeIn gratis.

So you see, Bad Microsoft still rules.

Earlier today, the EU fined Microsoft $733 million USD for reneging on an antitrust agreement.

So, I take that back: Bad Microsoft doesn’t rule. Stupid Microsoft rules in Redmond!

© 2002 – 2013, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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The SmallBizWindows Product of the Year 2013: Microsoft Windows Server 2012

Windows Server 2012 is the SmallBizWindows Product of the Year 2013

PRODUCTIt is remarkable that in a year when the Microsoft Windows client has been thoroughly reimagined as the delectable Windows 8, now in regular and RT form, that Windows Server would be in the race with Windows client as the SmallBizWindows Product of the Year.

This year though, Server 2012 is nothing of a dilettante.

While it wasn’t a dark horse, as our ardor for it was quite evident, we didn’t initially expect it to win this, our top Award.

As we went along in the process, and looked at what product would be most impactful, especially to our target demographic, Windows Server 2012 started to emerge as a likely winner.

We are pleased to bestow the SmallBizWindows Product of the Year 2013 Award on it.

To bring you more about this very transcendent product, I will attempt to see if I can setup a series of blog post where I interview a Microsoft staffer on a specific feature or subsystem, and bring that to you.

You can always reach me at John [dot] Obeto [at] absolutevista [dot] com if there is a specific feature you would like me to add to my list.

For those keeping score, Windows Server 2012 is the first ever winner of 3 awards at SmallBizWindows.

Congrats to the Server Team at Microsoft for a job well done Winking smile

Finalists

  • HP Proliant ML350 Gen8
  • Microsoft Server 2012
  • Microsoft Surface Pro
  • Microsoft Surface RT
  • Microsoft Windows 8
  • Microsoft Windows Phone 8
  • Microsoft Windows RT
  • Nokia Lumia 920

PRODUCTSOFTWAREAWARDOS

© 2002 – 2013, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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No, Microsoft doesn’t need a native iPad Office app!

Office 365Why should they?

Four reasons why Microsoft shouldn’t:

  1. Microsoft Office is on iPad today: As it stands right now, any iPad user can access office via Office Web Apps. Is it too much to ask iPad cattle to launch a browser and run office from their free Skydrives?
  2. Cost: With every purchase of a Microsoft Office iPad app, Microsoft would be fattening the coffers of the loops at 1, Infinite Loop, in Cupertino, where the vig, I believe, is currently $100. For a subscription purchase, that is unacceptable.
  3. Differentiating factor: Let’s face it, Microsoft Office on Surface, Tablets, and Windows Phone is a key differentiator for those platforms at this time. It is a product that other platforms don’t have, and it makes Microsoft’s OS platforms immediately useful for enterprise and knowledge workers.
  4. Mobile is key to Microsoft’s future fortunes. So far, Microsoft is badly – badly! – trailing in the mobile space. If Microsoft devs its crown jewels for other platforms, why should anyone care about Windows tablets or Windows Phone?

I’m sure there are numerous other issues that may stop Microsoft from developing for iOS.

However, these four, of the top of my melon, are the primary reason why Microsoft shouldn’t develop native Office apps for iOS or Android.

Am I wrong?

© 2002 – 2013, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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The SmallBizWindows Software of the Year 2013: Microsoft Windows Server 2012

Quite a lot of software was released last year, of which the following were our finalists:

  1. Microsoft Office 365/Office 2013
  2. Microsoft Windows 8
  3. Microsoft Windows RT
  4. Microsoft Windows Phone 8
  5. Microsoft Server 2012

SOFTWAREAWARDThe AbsolutelyWindows Software of the Year 2013: Microsoft Windows Server 2012

Once in a while, software is created that is what I would call “revolutionarily evolutionary”.

Windows Server 2012 is such a product.

In a vacuum, it is the best server operating system out there.

When looked at respective to Windows Server 2008 R2, you find that there are so many improvements to Server 2012, that merely calling it an upgrade is doing it a great disservice.

The various components and subsystems that make up Server 2012 are a vast improvement over their predecessors in Server 2008 R2 that you may as well be attempting to describe the difference between Server R2 and LAN server.

Yes, Server 2012 is that much improved!

Some improvements are:

  • BitLocker improvements
  • Dedupe functionality
  • DirectAccess
  • Hyper-V 3.0
  • Hyper-v Replica
  • Live Migration
  • NIC teaming
  • PowerShell
  • SMB 3.0
  • Storage Spaces
  • Thin provisioning

We believe that the impact of Windows Server 2012 will be immediately felt.

We have felt it here, and just the manageability improvements alone make this product worth it.

Windows Server 2012 is our SmallBizWindows Software of the Year 2013

OSSOFTWAREAWARD

© 2002 – 2013, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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The SmallBizWindows Operating System of the Year 2013

The Contenders:

  • Windows 8
  • Windows Phone 8
  • Windows RT
  • Windows Server 2012

OSThe SmallBizWindows Operating System of the Year 2013 is Windows Server 2012

This selection was about as hard as our Software of the Year Award was.

Why?

This was a year in which Microsoft released Windows 8, a perennial winner, Windows Phone 8, and Windows RT, a version of Windows 8 for ARM devices.

They are all great operating systems.

However, Microsoft Windows Server 2012 stands head and shoulders above them all in all.

In performance, utility, reliability, and potential for partner profits.

© 2002 – 2013, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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The SmallBizWindows Mobile Product of the Year 2013: Windows Phone 8

MOBILEMicrosoft Windows Phone 8 is the SmallBizWindows Mobile Product of the Year 2013.

This is not an altogether unexpected development.

However, the surge of love for the Nokia Lumia 920 among my staff during the voting process was the surprise.

However, dissociating the Nokia Lumia hardware from the software brought the goodness of Windows Phone 8 to the fore again.

Windows Phone 8 is beautiful. It is innovative. It is snappy, at least on the three devices I have tried it out on: the afore-mentioned Lumia 920, the Lumia 822, and the HTC 8X.

The ecosystem around Windows Phone 8 is coming into its own. The Windows Phone Marketplace now has over 125,000 apps.

In usability, it is easy to use, very fluid and responsive, and best of all, friendly.

Against the backdrop of ho-hum updates to the only other meaningful mobile OS platform, iOS, Windows Phone is a very welcome breath of fresh air.

As a result, Windows Phone 8 is the SmallBizWindows Mobile Product of the Year 2013.

Finalists:

  • Microsoft Surface RT
  • Microsoft Windows Phone 8
  • Nokia Lumia 920

© 2002 – 2013, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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The SmallBizWindows Server of the Year 2013: HP Proliant ML350

SERVERThe HP Proliant ML350 is our workhorse server.

It is the device we have standardized on as our primary management server, and is used by us whenever ML350pG8tower_FrontBezel_HRa server is needed.

In the current Gen8 rev, the Proliant ML350 surpasses our needs for performance, reliability, and manageability.

Anecdotally, it is deployed at my home, and we also have two generations of it humming away at MedikLabs here in rural NE Colorado.

By every metric, the ML350 is peerless, and continues to serve us dutifully.

It is the SmallBizWindows Server of the Year 2013.

© 2002 – 2013, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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The AbsolutelyWindows HP GPC 2013 Freestyle: Steve DeWitt

One of the things I look for in a business executive is passion.

Passion for his/her company, the product(s) they own, and for the success of their end-user clients or customers.

At HP, Meg Whitman, David Scott, Doug Oathout, Charlie Bess, Mark Shoemaker, quite a few of the enterprise marketing staff, and numerous others have stood out for the rather infectious passion they exude.

Now though, I understand why the ESN marketing group at HP is quite passionate.

Steve DeWitt.

This guy loves what he does, and I tried to capture some of that for you in this Freestyle.

© 2002 – 2013, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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The SmallBizWindows Tablet & Laptop of the Year 2013: Microsoft Surface Pro

TABLETLAPTOPMicrosoft Surface Pro is the best tablet and laptop on the market today.

Period.

In the several weeks since I have had Surface Pro, I have been more impressed with it than all the other systems around here.

And for a first effort, Surface Pro is largely immediately useful.

Since it is x86-based, I am able to perform all the same tasks on it as I can on any of the PCs in our inventory. Moreover, with Office 365, I can continue to live in Outlook, a ‘feat’ I cannot currently enjoy on our SurfaceRT units.

Surface Pro looks, feels, and performs like a premium product; as it should, since it is priced as such.

I am able to run a Windows 7 VM in it – because I can –and still have the portability of a tablet.en-US_Surface_Win_8_Pro_128GB_RM1

I have used it on my weekly trips to the ‘day job’, and last week took it to Las Vegas for the 2013 HP Global Partner Conference as my only system.

It did not fail me.

Coupled with the satisfaction Wifey, Rod and I have had with Surface Pro, we have given it both the SmallBizWindows Laptop of the Year and Tablet of the Year Awards.

It is a truly aspirational device!

© 2002 – 2013, John Obeto for Blackground Media Unlimited

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