Businesses
will see the attraction in a device that makes remote meetings more flexible
Microsoft is
including some seriously sexy stuff in its plans for Windows 10, pushing it as
not just an operating system but a platform to bring together a number of
devices and a big range of applications. The plans for holograms and integrating
the Xbox and PCs are the obvious sources of excitement, but it could be the
Microsoft Surface Hub – essentially a large screen for remote meetings – that provides
the initial boost.
While the
early speculation on Windows 10 focused on rectifying the mistakes of Windows
8, Microsoft’s presentation
last week made clear it’s about a lot more. It emphasised what it called the “mobility
of experience”, so what you’re doing on one device can be automatically resumed
on another, and the importance of natural interactions such as voice, using a
pen, gestures and gaze.
It flagged
up advances in its Cortana personal assistant, which is moving beyond Windows
Phone into PCs and tablets. And it showed off some cutting edge augmented
reality in the form of its HoloLens.
Then there
was the Surface Hub, an 84 inch HD screen with integrated computing capacity
and built-in everything to support brainstorming and meetings for groups in
different locations. It can link up with Skype, take content from any connected
device, and lets users scrawl their notes straight onto the screen for everyone
to save.
I can see
this prompting a lot of businesses to think seriously about moving to Windows
10 earlier than they might have done. It’s anchored in something that all still
appreciate – the importance of sitting in a room and sharing ideas – while making
it easier to share and update documents, images and ideas visually. It looks
like taking them closer to sitting in a room together when they could be on
different sides of the world.
I’ve been sceptical
about any rush to adopt Windows 10 in the workplace, and still feel that
most businesses will be cautious; but Surface Hub could do more than any other
element to encourage early adopters. It offers a lot of potential while being
rooted in a process with which most people are familiar, and won’t require too
big a leap for them to begin using it.
Of course,
the technology needs Windows 10 to work, and Microsoft has to rectify its
mistakes with the interfaces of 8; but combined with the promise of free
upgrades for users of Windows 7 and 8 it will provide an attractive lure for
the early days of the campaign to sell the new operating system.
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