The Tablet Race

Opinion Brief

Microsoft's deal with Barnes & Noble: Is a Windows Nook coming?

The two former rivals are teaming up, and a slide-tiled, sub-$200 tablet might just be on the horizon

With Microsoft as its partner, Barnes & Noble may make a run at Amazon's Kindle Fire by upgrading its Nook to a Windows 8 operating system.

With Microsoft as its partner, Barnes & Noble may make a run at Amazon's Kindle Fire by upgrading its Nook to a Windows 8 operating system. Photo: Spencer Platt/Getty Images SEE ALL 78 PHOTOS

Best Opinion:  Forbes, ZDNet, Yahoo News

Microsoft announced on Monday that it was investing $300 million in a partnership with Barnes & Noble to form a subsidiary dubbed "NewCo." The venture will house the bookseller's Nook products and higher-education business, and Barnes & Noble will reproduce the Nook's e-reader application and bookstore for Windows 8. Additionally, industry watchers speculate that in the next iteration of the Nook Tablet, Barnes & Noble will ditch its heavily modified version of the Android operating system in favor of Microsoft's highly-praised Windows 8 OS, a move that would further differentiate the 7-inch tablet from its primary competitor, Amazon's market-leading Kindle Fire. Could a $200, Windows-powered Nook Tablet be in the cards?

Don't hold your breath: Bringing Windows 8's beautifully designed interface to an underpowered 7-inch device won't be easy, says Jason Perlow at ZDNet. For starters, it would be difficult to retool and license Windows 8 while still selling the Nook at $199. More likely: The Nook Tablet will get "Apollo," the codename for the Windows Phone OS due out later this year, which isn't quite Windows 8. Maybe such a scaled-down slab could compete with the Kindle Fire, but even then, "we are probably looking at a six-to-eight-month, product-development-to-launch timeframe, at the bare minimum." Temper expectations accordingly.
Will Barnes & Noble and Nook usher in a $199 Windows Metro tablet?

E-textbooks might force a Windows 8 tablet: Barnes & Noble's textbooks "aren't available for purchase on the Nook Color and Nook Tablet," says Jared Spurlock at Yahoo News, largely because the device's 7-inch screen "isn't conducive to reading full-sized college textbooks." But with the education business driving Microsoft's investment, and with Windows 8 meant for a 10-inch screen, it seems plausible that we'll see an iPad-sized Nook Tablet running Windows 8.
What would a Nook-branded Windows 8 tablet look like?

Regardless, rivals should worry: A Windows-powered Nook could turn the market upside down, and that's why this deal "ratchets up the competitive heat" on two fronts, says Eric Savitz at Forbes. First, Microsoft is coming after Google's Android, potentially pushing the operating system off the Nook entirely. And second, the company is targeting its "cross-town rival Amazon," setting its sights on the "increasingly lucrative e-reader segment." No matter what it does, Microsoft now has the market's attention.
Microsoft's Nook deal: Pushing Windows 8 into new realms?

 
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Are tablet-PC hybrids doomed?

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Intel's "Letexo" prototype combines the touchscreen functionality of a tablet with the keyboard capabilities of a PC.

The line between traditional PCs and tablets is beginning to blur, as evidenced by Microsoft's swipe-friendly Windows 8 interface, or Intel's recently unveiled "Letexo," an ultrabook-tablet hybrid with a detachable touchscreen. When asked about the emerging trend... More

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Samsung's Galaxy Tab 2: The best cheap Android tablet yet?

The Korean manufacturer's affordable new 7-inch device will have to compete with proven winners like Amazon's Kindle Fire and Barnes & Noble's Nook Tablet

The Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 may be $50 more than the Kindle Fire, but it features the superior Android Ice Cream Sandwich OS and 50GB of Dropbox space for one year.

The market for affordable tablets below the $300 price point is alive and thriving, as best evidenced by Amazon's popular $200 Kindle Fire. Now, Samsung is entering the fray with the 7-inch Galaxy Tab 2, which actually costs $50 more than the Fire or Barnes &... More

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Toshiba's 13-inch tablet: A colossal mistake?

The Android-powered Excite 13 dwarfs the competition with an extra-large touchscreen — but in the tablet market, bigger might not be better

On Tuesday, Toshiba unveiled three new Excite tablets, but the giant 13.3-inch version is hogging all the attention.

Toshiba is going big (or going home) with an oversized new addition to its line of Excite tablets. With an enormous 13.3-inch touchscreen, the Android-powered Excite 13 is much larger than any tablet on the market, nearly twice as expansive as the 7-inch Kindle... More

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Are Microsoft and Apple teaming up to 'destroy' Android?

Word, Excel, and PowerPoint are reportedly coming to the iPad — but not to Google's tablets

Goodbye, Notes: Microsoft Office is reportedly coming to the iPad, which could give Apple's device a distinct advantage over Android tablets.

Earlier this week, The Daily published photographs that seemed to confirm the long-standing rumor that Microsoft Office is coming to Apple's iPad. (Microsoft denies that the leaked images are real, but hasn't denied the existence of the project.) Of course, Apple... More

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Should Barnes & Noble spin-off the Nook?

With its promising but costly e-reader business dragging down its bottom line, the bookstore chain is considering a separation

Barnes & Noble has captured one-quarter of the e-reader market with its Nook, but associated costs have left the company in the red.

On Thursday, Barnes & Noble said that its losses for this fiscal year would be twice as much as forecast. The largest bookstore chain in the country has managed to adapt to changing times and technologies better than the late Borders, but that's come at a price... More

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