Microsoft didn;t exhibit off its rumored Courier tablet at CEO Steve Ballmer;s keynote on January six at the Customer Electronics Exhibit (CES), as I predicted earlier inside the day. Nor did Ballmer share any specifics on Windows Cellular 7,
Windows 7 Professional Key, Windows Live Wave four, Windows 8 or a lot of something else that enthusiasts had been hoping to hear/see.Instead,
Microsoft Office 2010 Home And Stude/nt, Ballmer did speak up a number of the not too long ago debuted Windows 7 PCs, a new Game Room retro-game arcade on Xbox Live (which had been formerly rumored), a soon-to-be-released Windows Mobile 6.five telephone from HTC/T-Mobile along with a forthcoming HP slate tablet (that;s absolutely nothing like Courier) in the occasion. Oh yeah… and he confirmed what he let slip months ago: That Project Natal, Microsoft;s next-generation gaming controller, is coming in 2010.Once Microsoft officials finally started confirming previously today that Ballmer wasn;t going to present off Courier, there was a whole lot of speculation that he might say a little something — anything — new about Windows Cellular 7. Nope. All we know is the next most likely venue for something WM-7-related is the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona in February. (We also do know that Microsoft is going to say a thing about WM7 for developers at its Mix 2010 present in mid-March, since they;ve put up a session placeholder for it on the Mix site.)After the power-related delay, which pushed back the start of Ballmer;s keynote by about 30 minutes,
Microsoft Office 2010 Pro, what did he say that caught my ear (via the streaming Webcast)? He used the words “screens” and “cloud” right off the bat,
Buy Office 2007, in case you had any doubts that Microsoft was going to continue to bang the “three screens and the cloud” drum inside the new year.He also mentioned one of Microsoft;s new favorite buzzwords, NUI (natural user interface), which means everything other than QWERTY input: Voice, touch, gestures, etc.Microsoft has inked an agreement with HP to make Bing the default search engine, and MSN the default homepage on HP PCs in 42 countries.He showed prototypes of three slate PCs (including the aforementioned HP one) that are all Windows seven based and due to ship in 2010. The other two were from Pegatron and Archos.He shared a couple of new Windows stats: On Black Friday, retailers sold 63 percent more PCs than they did the year before. And the 2009 holiday season saw greater than 50 percent year-over-year growth for Windows PC sales, Ballmer said, quoting NPD. Maybe Microsoft would be better off just relinquishing the CES keynote kick-off spot. Yes, I know there;s a renewed focus at the company on proving Microsoft has customer mettle. But if you;re going to back up that claim, you need to bring to CES some things people are actually excited about. Not version 2.0 of MediaRoom (Microsoft;s IPTV software, if you;ve forgotten).It says a great deal that one with the biggest new announcements in Ballmer;s keynote was the Blio e-reader software from Ray Kurzweil and Baker & Taylor. The software supports full color graphics, multiple voices, note-taking, video and several other features that may make it useful inside the textbook room, in particular. OK, OK — that HP slate looked nice,
Office 2010 Product Key, too… It was running the Kindle for PC software in Ballmer;s demo.I know there are various folks who think Microsoft;s noticeable move away from pre-announcing strategies and technologies is a good one that will better help the company meet expectations (and emulate a couple of its competitors). But continuing to re-announce previously unveiled technologies — even in new bottles — doesn;t create significantly excitement.Do you think Microsoft would have been better served showing a sneak peek of Windows Cellular seven or Windows 8/IE 9 at CES? Or do you think the elephants inside the room don;t really overshadow the actual technologies Microsoft that are already shipping and/or closer to delivery?