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At CES 2011 Keynote, Microsoft CEO Takes The Stage Amid Tablet Crush

JESSICA MINTZ   01/ 5/11 11:53 PM ET   AP

Ces 2011 Keynote Microsoft Ceo

One year ago, Microsoft Corp. CEO Steve Ballmer took the stage at the tech industry's premier gadget show to showcase a Windows tablet computer to an audience that had yet to meet the iPad.

This year, with tablets marking the hottest items at the show and Windows lagging far behind Apple Inc.'s popular iPad, the stakes were higher. Microsoft's status as a technology oracle, which guaranteed its spot delivering the trade show's night-before keynote each year, is slipping.

On Wednesday evening, Ballmer spent more time talking about such existing products the Xbox video game system and Windows Phone 7 smart phone software than he did tablets. Even Surface, Microsoft's giant coffee-table-sized touch-screen computing system, got more attention.

Beyond tablets, there are other major themes emerging at this year's International Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas – areas where Microsoft has also failed to take the lead despite spending years developing products.

Among them: smart phones and Internet television, two areas where Google Inc. and Apple, which aren't even attending the trade show, are getting most of the buzz.

Gadget makers including AsusTek Computer Inc. and Vizio Inc., the TV company, have already unveiled new tablet computers this week, and more were expected from the likes of Motorola Inc., Dell Inc. and Toshiba Corp. Many of the new tablets will use Android, Google Inc.'s operating software that was initially designed for smart phones.

So far, none of the tablets running Microsoft's Windows 7 have made waves with mainstream consumers. That may be true for a while longer – tablets seemed to be almost an afterthought for Ballmer on Wednesday. The CEO left it to an employee to demonstrate a Windows 7 tablet from Taiwan's Asus that responds to touch and a special pen, and that comes with a wireless keyboard.

While Windows 7 remains a question mark for its prospects as a tablet system, Microsoft began talking Wednesday about the next version, which is expected to be called Windows 8 and to launch in 2012.

Microsoft showed a very early build of the next Windows, including a version that runs on cell phone chips, providing an alternative for the first time in many years to the chips based on Intel Corp. technology. At the moment, most tablet computers including the iPad use that type of chip, which consumes less energy and allows for longer battery life.

"Whatever device you use, now or in the future, Windows will be there," Ballmer said.

This year's trade show, which runs Thursday to Sunday, will also see TV makers adjusting strategies for selling 3-D televisions after a year of tepid sales. LG Electronics Inc. said Wednesday it will be among the TV makers switching from sets that require expensive battery-powered glasses to ones that work with cheaper glasses like those used in movie theaters.

For Microsoft, a software maker, Internet-connected televisions or set-top boxes from competitors such as Google and Apple are more of a concern. Microsoft has had an Internet TV system for many years, but its customers have been telecommunications companies that repackaged the service to their own subscribers – not consumers directly. Google and Apple, however, have gone straight to consumers with Internet TV offerings under their own brands, while Microsoft has stuck with the Xbox as its main entertainment play.

Ballmer said Microsoft sold 8 million of its new Kinect sensor, an add-on for Xbox 360 that lets people control games and other features by moving around and speaking. That's 3 million more than expected in Kinect's first two months on the market.

The CEO himself demonstrated new Kinect avatar software that will more closely mimic game players' behaviors and facial expressions after an update this spring.

Microsoft also said that this spring, people who have Xbox and Kinect will be able to wave their hands or speak aloud to browse and play video from NetFlix and Hulu.

This was Ballmer's third year leading the gadget show address. He took the mantle from Microsoft co-founder and chairman, Bill Gates, who had used the stage for the preceding 10 years to talk about his vision for the future of technology.

Gates used the opportunity to predict the rise of PCs in U.S. homes, the arrival of portable touch screens that would display Internet content and music streamed from a home PC and the advent of even simple gadgets such as pens that can connect to the Internet.

He was not always right about the timing, or the specific device or software that would bring about the revolution.

A most memorable case in point: the tablet computer. Gates talked about it a decade ago, but it is only in the last year that the tablet – a slim touch-screen computer with no keyboard – has caught consumers' imaginations in a big way.

Ballmer took over Gates' role as CEO but not as company visionary; as such, his pronouncements have not seemed as grand or oracle-like. But people will be paying particularly close attention this year, seeking signs that Microsoft has made progress since Ballmer took the stage one year ago.

During the keynote, a Microsoft employee walked the audience through the features in Windows Phone 7, the company's answer to the iPhone and Android that launched toward the end of 2010. Microsoft said it will update the phone software in the next few months to make it faster and to support copying and pasting. Windows Phone 7 devices will also become available for Verizon Wireless and AT&T Inc. networks.

Windows Phone 7 has a lot of catching up to do in terms of both the number of users and the number of "apps" available for the phones. On Wednesday, handset makers Motorola Mobility Inc., HTC Corp. and Samsung Electronics Co. showed off several upcoming smart phones that will run on AT&T Inc.'s higher-speed "HSPA+" network. All the phones will run a version of Android, not Windows.

Microsoft also showed an updated version of Surface, with new technology that lets thin LCD screens recognize objects placed on top without the use of cameras.

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One year ago, Microsoft Corp. CEO Steve Ballmer took the stage at the tech industry's premier gadget show to showcase a Windows tablet computer to an audience that had yet to meet the iPad. This year...
One year ago, Microsoft Corp. CEO Steve Ballmer took the stage at the tech industry's premier gadget show to showcase a Windows tablet computer to an audience that had yet to meet the iPad. This year...
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10:04 AM on 01/07/2011
Always a bridesmaid
10:32 PM on 01/06/2011
Who is writing these articles? First of... MS is not in the business of building hardware. The Xbox being the exception. There are many tablets on the market that are running Windows 7 touch (NOT WINDOWS 7 Ultimate, Premium, or Home). This is what you get when the average Jane quits pole dancing and starts blogging for a living. A load of crap that's for all we know sponsored by the people who didn't attend. I wonder why Apple never attends CES. Hmmm I guess they're not in the Electronics business. That must be it. Or could it be that their measly 2 products would look puney next to the slew of products by the other companies that are truly trying to innovate. I strongly suggest to these so called bloggers to get the facts straight before they blog. MS doesn't need a tablet strategy. They are not in the business of making tablets if they were they would have released a MS desktop or a MS laptop or even a MS smartphone. Steve Jobs once said that Apple is a software company and those who love to do software would insist on making their own hardware. Sounds like one confused statement if you ask me. It's funny how no one writes about Apple's lack of Cloud vision or strategy. I mean does it really matter what you use to access the data anymore? Does it? Really?
02:48 PM on 01/06/2011
Khan Manka, jr. just completed his keynote address and railed against the computer electronics industry on behalf of Hollywood...

http://mankabros.com/chairmans-blog/2011/01/the-future-is-last-year-ces-20.html
02:19 PM on 01/06/2011
The reality is that the hardware trend is cell phones, games, pads and tablets. Apple has a leading position in cell and pads. Microsoft has a winning position in games. Whomever can combine all 3 into one product takes the whole market.
Apple has a very tight focused approach to the consumer market. So they appear the most in the lead to the consumer,
Microsoft has a general market position so they dont appear as focused,
but Microsoft has a huge enterprise position which doesn't appear on consumers horizons. But in annoyance/convenience areas Microsoft appears on consumers horizons as inferior to Apple because Microsofts product just don't operate smoothly....try to install a new 64bit Windows 7 OS... it's a job. Mac will perform an OS install automatically. Microsoft has a lot of work to do to tune up their image, if they ever will. Gene Evangelist
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jgeurian21
04:00 PM on 01/06/2011
"try to install a new 64bit Windows 7 OS... it's a job."

HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

You win the award for the dumbest comment for the day. I just bought a cheap laptop for my daughter and it took all of 10 minutes to install Windows 7 64 Pro. It seriously is about 6 button clicks and waiting for 10 minutes. Then perhaps about 20 minutes to download all of the updates , but that is true of OSX from a clean install. I mean wow. Dumbest comment of the day.
10:47 PM on 01/06/2011
I've installed Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit clean and upgrade on physical and virtual PCs. I don't know what issues you ran into but I can tell you they're very isolated... I don't understand what you're basing your statement about their lack of focus on. I see a company that has welcomed the competition and stepped up its game. They've made their consumer OS better, their mobile OS better, they practically dominate the console market and have some covitted positions on the Xbox Live platform. An exclusive with ESPN. An unparalleled experience with NetFlix and even Zune is getting better. I do blame them for not taking out enough ads explaining to laymen how they've made some really good products. Just an fyi I've been running Windows 7 since beta and it has yet to actually crash on me or require a reboot for anything other than Adobe Acrobat updates. Why does Adobe get a free pass for writing such a imposing piece of code, I don't know...
photo
bart4u
Concerned Citizen
01:27 PM on 01/06/2011
He lies every computer I use is Mac based. Every Windows user I know of always has a problem with their operating system. Mac's are so easy and I have four of them and they all work like a charm. I guess if you are into gaming then go buy a Windows system. Getting back to this guy he is always chasing Apples tail. His company will never lead again. Go buy a Mac.
10:57 PM on 01/06/2011
I have news for you bart... had it not been for MS' $200 Million dollar investment into Apple a few years back (I guess Apple was first in needing a bail out! Wow look at that!) you wouldn't be able to make the first part statement you just made today. The second part of your statement is clearly unfounded. I am curious if you even know the difference between problems with an OS or problems with applications that were poorly written by underqualified software engineers. The last part of the statement where you predict that MS will never lead again is a bit whacky! MS leads the desktop market there is no debate there. MS leads the browser market again undisputable facts. MS leads the productivity tools market (MS Office, Word, excel) even on a Mac! Again facts here. MS is a leader in Enterprise products with products such as Exchange and Outlook, SQL Server (professional database system) Diagnostics and Reporting. Anyway the list is too long to even try to educate you on reality but I advise you get your facts straight next time before you decide to make a dumb statement...
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dtrobert
08:20 AM on 01/06/2011
Ballmer should resign. He's become a farce in the tech industry, as someone who can't see tech trends even when they're staring him in the face. He's just not a tech guy; he's a pencil pusher. Let a real tech guy take the creative helm of the company, and let Ballmer fall back to a CFO type position, for which he's far more suited.
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jgeurian21
10:33 AM on 01/06/2011
I hate to point out that under Balmer MS developed the fastest selling piece of software in the history of computing, developed the best selling gaming console in the US, created a billion dollar Xbox Live system, developed a unified robotics language, partnered with NASA on a world telescope project and even managed to bring the first controller less, touch free gaming and PC interface to the market. Unless you think someone else in MS is herding these accomplishments?
01:03 AM on 01/06/2011
"Whatever device you use, now or in the future, Windows will be there," Ballmer said.

LOL!!! The dinosaur pretends it's still relevant. LOL!!!

Sorry Ballmer. Windows is less and less "there" every day. Sure, it will be around for some time to come. So were the dinosaurs. But the asteroid has hit. And the pain will continue to be felt by MS. Until one day it will be "remember the operating system"? "Yeah - those were the good old days!"

LOL at MS.
LOL at Ballmer.
12:10 AM on 01/06/2011
Sure they'll put windows on tablets, but it's not a good interface for fingers. Windows + UI apps like thinix.com/mymashup and thinix.com/touch create a powerful, usable device.
10:48 PM on 01/05/2011
I find myself waving my hands, shaking my first, and yelling at my PC all the time to get it to do what I need it to. So what’s new about this technology?
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jgeurian21
10:32 AM on 01/06/2011
You need to use the keyboard and mouse. Waving your hands and talking to your PC does nothing. Man, I thought that might have been obvious.
01:22 AM on 01/07/2011
I always start out with the keyboard and mouse...maybe I just need a little more patience.