Thursday 14 June 2012

Unique Content Article on Windows 7 fortablets,Tablet PC Comparison,Tablet PC News

What Can You Expect From Windows 7 For Tablets?


by Paul Barber


What does this have to offer and how is it different from other operating systems? Let's examine it.Compared against other more established or even more preferred mobile operating systems, Windows 7 for tablets offers a different kind of user experience. It offers the power and capacities of Windows 7, genuinely to hand.



The Difference

The most notable difference between Windows 7 for tablets and the other mobile operating systems is that it was not designed for tablet Computers under consideration. The OS requires a different processor design (one that you would routinely find in a desktop, laptop PC or netbook) so you cannot simply take a tablet made for Android and install Windows 7 in it. IOS and Android, the 2 most popular mobile operating systems for tablet Computers and smartphones are made especially for ARM processors, which are largely SoCs (system-on-a-chip) with GPU, RAM, and other parts built in. Windows 7, on the other hand, supports Intel and AMD chips.



Except for the processor difference, Windows 7 for tablets also has got a different set of minimum hardware requirements: 1 GHz processor, 1 GB RAM, and 16 GB of free disk space, amongst others. As you will observe, Windows tablets have bigger storage drives compared against iOS and Android-powered tablets - with some featuring as big as 320 GB HDDs. Other Windows new tablets are outfitted with solid state drives (SSDs) and while technical specifications will vary from model to model, the hardware is generally similar to that of netbooks.



Familiarity with Windows 7 for tablets

What's the general upside to running a Windows 7 tablet? Well, for one thing, there is an enormous chance you are already acquainted with it and thus the only thing you'd need to learn is using touch input as the OS has inbuilt support. If you do not plan on deserting traditional input strategies (keyboard and mouse) though, then you'd be pleased to know that there's an array of Windows 7 tablets with USB ports. Some are even designed to be convertible (with a keyboard dock) or hybrid tablets (with a keyboard built in). What else can you get out of Windows 7 for tablets? Windows applications and Microsoft Office are two things that right away come to mind.



At any rate, the Windows tablet is pretty cool especially for corpo applications since it is mobile, strong, and versatile. Microsoft is working on its previous version, Windows 8, and we shall see how that fares against the competition. Early tablet PC reviews have high hopes though if some tablet PC news reports are going to be assumed, it's still some months before we see it.






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