When
I asked Microsoft officials back in late June for a list of vendors
making Windows RT tablets and PCs, they declined to provide one. But as I
noted at that time, Asus, Toshiba and Acer had all announced plans to provide Windows RT devices. Dell was rumored to be making a Windows RT machine, as well. Last week, ABCNews reported that Lenovo would be making two versions of its IdeaPad Yoga convertible machine: One running Windows 8 and one running Windows RT.
"You
will need to stay tuned for more details; PC manufacturers will be
unveiling their products as we approach the Windows 8 and Windows RT
launch," said Mike Angiulo, the vice president of our Ecosystem and
Planning team, and author of today's blog post. (We know Microsoft is
planning to have its Surface RT system available on October 26, but we do not know exact dates for the other OEMs.)
Microsoft officials also wouldn't comment on whether Windows RT had released to manufacturing (RTM'd) when Windows 8 did on August 1. But Microsoft officially is acknowledging Windows RT also has RTM'd, thanks to a mention in today's blog post.
In
today's post, Microsoft also shared some rough guidelines about battery
life expectations for Windows RT machines. When a Windows RT PC is not
in use (on connected standby), it will not require a battery charge for
days, Angiulo said. He also mentioned Windows RT machines' ability to
deliver "all day battery life" on "thin and light" machines. More
specifically, he said Microsoft has seen 8 hours to 13 hours of HD video
playback time on Windows RT PCXs, and 320 hours to 409 hours (more than
13 to 17 days) battery life when in connected-standby mode.
Anguilo
said Microsoft and partners built "thousands of reference design
hardware systems" and seeded more than 1,500 Windows RT reference
machines to software and hardware vendor partners to prepare for launch.
He also said Microsoft has found more than 90 percent of the RTM
applications in the Windows Store support Windows RT, and that there
will be printers, webcams and mobile broadband modules certified for
Windows RT.
Here's a photo provided by Microsoft of a prototype Windows RT system next to an actual, ready-to-ship model:
Microsoft's new blog post also repeated some facts about the upcoming
Windows RT operating system that Microsoft previously divulged, but
which are worth repeating. Windows RT includes a "siginificant amount"
of shared code with Windows 8, but is not identical to it. There is one
Windows RT binary that supports Windows RT SoC platforms from NVIDIA,
Qualcomm, and Texas Instruments. Windows RT software will not be sold or
distributed independent of a new Windows RT PC; it will be preloaded
only.
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