Microsoft unveils a hybrid Surface Neo laptop and Surface Duo with dual Android display
https://newsstechh.blogspot.com/2019/10/microsoft-unveils-hybrid-surface-neo.html
Microsoft unveils a hybrid Surface Neo laptop and Surface Duo with dual Android display
Microsoft unveiled a new Surface Neo laptop this morning, with two 9-inch side-by-side displays and a folding keyboard that turn them into a small laptop.
That was before the company unveiled a smaller device called Surface Duo, a dual-screen tablet smartphone that runs Android apps in a surprise partnership between Microsoft and Google, perhaps the ultimate example of Redmond.
The duo has two 5.6-inch screens and a 8.3-inch folding. It is a dual-screen device that Microsoft secretly developed a decade ago before being suspended without a product release.
Technology analyst Patrick Moorhead from Moore Insights, in response to news from the event, said that Microsoft does not exclusively put it in the form of a smartphone, but Duo represents "the best opportunity Microsoft would have had in smartphones."
The devices represent long-awaited access to Microsoft's dual-screen products, after years of frustrating rumors and initiatives. The company says it has been developing the devices for years, with hundreds of engineers involved.
Microsoft unveiled a new Surface Neo laptop this morning, with two 9-inch side-by-side displays and a folding keyboard that turn them into a small laptop.
That was before the company unveiled a smaller device called Surface Duo, a dual-screen tablet smartphone that runs Android apps in a surprise partnership between Microsoft and Google, perhaps the ultimate example of Redmond.
The duo has two 5.6-inch screens and a 8.3-inch folding. It is a dual-screen device that Microsoft secretly developed a decade ago before being suspended without a product release.
Technology analyst Patrick Moorhead from Moore Insights, in response to news from the event, said that Microsoft does not exclusively put it in the form of a smartphone, but Duo represents "the best opportunity Microsoft would have had in smartphones."
The devices represent long-awaited access to Microsoft's dual-screen products, after years of frustrating rumors and initiatives. The company says it has been developing the devices for years, with hundreds of engineers involved.