Acer also has disagreements with Microsoft over the latter's strategy to converge IT and the consumer electronics market, and believes the company must better develop Media Center if users are to embrace it.
It has researched how consumers use home entertainment systems and is pressing Microsoft to make the platform more stable.
If consumers are to accept home entertainment systems based on PC technology, the technology must be simple and response times must be fast, said Wong.
Enter Longhorn, with glitch-free audio/video, accelerated UI, and real-time OS services (possibly with MCE integrated into the base package [just speculation at this point]).
Concerning Tablet PC, there are also further improvements for it coming in the Longhorn timeframe like a real-time stylus API, the ability to train recognition bias to your own handwriting, further integration of ink into the filesystem with WinFS, and an effort to provide ink interoperability between Taplet PC and Pocket PC devices. (TabletPC may also be folded into the base OS in this timeframe [again, speculation at this point]).
There are also updates due next year for the Tablet PC, like allowing inking from partially trusted apps so you can use ink in web applications, increased language support, an improved tablet input panel, moving recognizer packs into the SDK for non-Tablet PC machines, and support for context-sensitive factoids for improved accuracy.
As far as application support, ink has been integrated where it makes the most sense in MS' products (Office, Messenger, etc.), and creating new ones (OneNote, Music Composition Tool) when a workable scenario arises. Third parties have provided apps like Grafigo (freestyle drawing, annotation and collaboration) and MathPad (write math problems like on a sheet of paper). Plus, any Windows app with a textbox can have information entered using ink, though the ink is converted to text.
Also, it was mentioned at the PDC that some people didn't buy Tablet PC's because they thought that the devices ran Windows CE, and they couldn't run their existing applications (Tablet PC is a superset of Windows XP Professional. Any app that runs on XP will run on Tablet PC).
Anyway, I've typed all of this not to totally discount Acer's concerns, but to show that MS isn't exactly sitting around twidling its thumbs on these issues.
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