Tech Advisor

Microsoft officially delays Surface Neo, dual-screen PCs

Microsoft’s chief product officer, Panos Panay, also pledges to accelerate Windows 10 features. MARK HACHMAN reports

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Microsoft has officially confirmed that it’s delaying its dual-screen Windows experience­s, including the Surface Neo, until “the right moment” arrives. That announceme­nt was part of a recent blog post in which Panos Panay, the new chief product officer of Windows and Devices, laid out his

vision of what he sees for Microsoft’s Windows 10 and related hardware programmes.

In some sense, the blog post announcing the changes reads like a recap of what we already know: the Windows 10 May 2020 Update began shipping to the general public last month; Microsoft is turning its Build conference into a free, online-only event; and Microsoft is postponing its own dual-screen devices.

The tech giant had only internally communicat­ed the latter choice internally, according to a recent ZDNet report. That report said Panay had indicated that the pandemic had prompted Microsoft to refocus its priorities on single-screen devices.

He has confirmed this, and offered more insight into Microsoft’s rationale for adjusting its strategy. “The world is a very different place than it was last October when we shared our vision for a new category of dualscreen Windows devices,” he wrote. “As we continue to put customers’ needs at the forefront, we need to focus on meeting customers where they are now.”

That means that Microsoft will “pivot our focus toward single-screen Windows 10X devices that leverage the power of the cloud to help our customers work, learn, and play in new ways”, Panay wrote. “These single-screen devices will be the first expression of Windows 10X that we deliver to our customers, and we will continue to look for the right moment, in conjunctio­n with our OEM partners, to bring dual-screen devices to market.”

Based on his phrasing, that essentiall­y means that Microsoft is delaying the Surface Neo, which was originally scheduled to ship in 2020. Windows

10X, which simplified the Windows experience and stretched the experience across two screens, will now emphasize the ‘simple’ rather than the two screens. (Microsoft’s Windows 10X emulator recently added a single-screen experience.) Focusing the delay on ‘dual-screen Windows devices’ also suggests that Microsoft may still ship the Surface Duo, a dual-screen Android phone, on time.

The future of Windows 10

More subtly, Panay also indicated that Microsoft may be gearing up to add more new features to Windows 10.

We’ve reviewed the Windows 10 May 2020 Update (see Tech Advisor June), so we know that Microsoft updated features like the Windows Subsystem for Linux and Cortana without adding new functional­ity.

“The May 2020 Update is just the first step,” Panay wrote. “As a team, we are committed to delivering meaningful innovation in ways that matter most to the billion people around the world relying on Windows right now. That is why, in this holiday and the next, we are going to accelerate innovation in Windows 10 to ensure that Windows devices are the best way to work, learn and play. We are going to make important improvemen­ts in every one of those areas.”

What those improvemen­ts are, and when they’ll arrive, aren’t known. Microsoft has wrestled with the tension between enterprise­s and some consumers, some of which have argued for fewer, less frequent changes and thus potential bugs. Others have welcomed new additions, feeling that Windows 10 has grown stale.

Interestin­gly, Panay highlighte­d some of the lesser-known additions to the Windows 10 May 2020 Update: the improved tablet experience, drag-anddrop functional­ity to the Eye Control gaze tracker, and the additional kaomoji to the Windows keyboard. We’ll have to see if those types of features are the new additions Panay will champion going forward.

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 ??  ?? It appears that you won’t be seeing this dual-screen view in Windows 10X hardware anytime soon
It appears that you won’t be seeing this dual-screen view in Windows 10X hardware anytime soon

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