While this is, of course, a fluff piece, to say MS is doing no action and only using words is laughable. Certainly you are not dwelling in reality, or you are too blind by your bias to see the obvious.
Dual and tripple monitors have been possible in Windows since Windows 98, if I recall correctly. I don't recall this being a matrox invention. Yes, Mac laptops had the ability to do display on 2 screens (the LCD and an external CRT) for some time even before Windows 98. It's possible Matrox was the first two-video-chips-on-one-PCB manufacturer, but slapping two PCI or one AGP/one PCI card into a PC and showing two monitors has been around for a long time.
As far as tablet PCs, while sales are luke warm, it's pretty ignorant to say no one is buying them. As for desktop PCs... uh... As for face recognition, I'm sure Linux and Apple will have that... 2 years after MS does.
As far as organizing and tracking photos, one of the best management softwares out there that I've seen so far is MS' Digital Image Library and/or the entire suite of MS "Digital Image *.*" products.
Sure, various vendors like HP, Canon, and other printer manufacturers have various management and quick-print software, they're fragmented and specific usually do their own products.
As far as Wireless, both MS and Apple have been doing this for a long time. Bluetooth seemed noticeably absent from Apple products up until their most recent products. One could say Apple has been lagging on the Bluetooh front.
"So MS's vision of the future (2006) is doing stuff from the past? "
No, it's taking their own existing leading technology and the scattered, fragmented technology from other vendors and bring it cohesively to one desktop and environment.
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