It's mostly forgotten by history now, but the name "Microsoft Surface," now referring to Microsoft's line of actually very good tablets and laptops, originally belonged to a line of 30-inch ...
SEATTLE – Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) has taken the wraps off "Surface," a coffee-table shaped computer that responds to touch and to special bar codes attached to everyday objects. The machines, which ...
Everyone loves Microsoft interactive table, Surface–just check out our list of killer Surface apps to see why. So it’s good news that this week Redmond announced it would be opening up the Surface ...
Long before there was Microsoft Surface Pro, Book, and Studio, there was Microsoft Surface, the coffee table. That product was mainly a proof of concept and it never did become a significant product ...
Next week, on 18 March, Microsoft will hold a conference-cum-bash in London to celebrate the launch of its Surface product. This is effectively a coffee table that thinks it’s a computer with a ...
Remember Microsoft’s gesture-based table computer called Surface? We got a hands-on of it back at All Things D, but Ars Technica got an in depth look, getting videos of some of the eight apps—some of ...
Now that Microsoft has a new 10-inch tablet called Surface, we're left wondering what will happen to the original Surface, the huge coffee table-sized tablet first developed years ago. We found the ...
Richard Trenholm was CNET's film and TV editor, covering the big screen, small screen and streaming. A member of the Film Critic's Circle, he's covered technology and culture from London's tech scene ...
As much fun as it is to tinker with Microsoft’s multitouch Surface table, most of its applications have been decidedly gimmicky. By offering a lower price (sooner than MS), more compact design, and ...
Microsoft has rebranded its original Surface massively multitouch technology as PixelSense, formerly only the name of the optical sensor it used, after launching the Surface line of tablets. Microsoft ...
Forget Microsoft Surface, this is what the perfect Apple worktable would look like. You would simply place an iOS device upon the desk to sync with iTunes and it would wirelessly sync data with iCloud ...