Skip to main content

Microsoft Courier Tablet

Microsoft CourierApple’s late-summer announcements have come and gone with nary a peep about the much-talked-about tablet, but in the meantime, plenty of other companies have been quick to run for their boards and ride the wave of tablet interest that has surged up with the mere rumble of one from Apple.

Toshiba hopped in with the Journe Touch, Archos pushed things a step further with its Archos 9, which will run Windows 7, and now, the Tom to Apple’s Jerry has stepped up with its own. This week, Microsoft laid its cards on the table with the Courier tablet.

Not so much a tablet as a “booklet,” (Microsoft’s own terminology) the Courier folds dual seven-inch inch screens within a book-like factor that completely seals up the screens when closed. Like the iPhone or Zune HD, both screens allow multi-touch gestures like pinching, and also work with a stylus. The only button lies on the inside spine.

Microsoft Courier

Microsoft’s first video of the project shows a demonstrator sliding contacts from one screen to the next, writing notes with the stylus, turning a written to-do list into a typed set of checkboxes, and writing on the virtual backs of photos taken with the tablet as if they were real. The emphasis seems to be on a more natural, intuitive experience, like a computerized version of the marble-cover notebooks you used to use in high school.

So far, Microsoft has only released a handful of details on the tablet, but the company has stated that the version shown is a “late prototype,” which could make it the first next-gen tablet to market, in advance of Apple. More details can be found at Gizmodo, which first broke news of the upcoming tablet.

Editors' Recommendations

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Managing Editor, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team delivering definitive reviews, enlightening…
Microsoft has a killer answer for DLSS with Copilot+
Portal RTX running on the Surface Laptop Studio 2.

Microsoft might be able to put out the Nvidia Deep Learning Super Sampling (DLSS) killer that companies like AMD and Intel have been gunning for. A new feature included with Copilot+ PCs is Auto SR, which is an AI-assisted upscaling tool similar to DLSS. It's exclusive to Copilot+ PCs for now, but Microsoft is leaving the door open for other platforms.

Although Microsoft hasn't confirmed that Auto SR will run on the Neural Processing Unit (NPU) inside Copilot+ PCs, the fact that it's an exclusive feature for now provides a pretty strong hint. On the Copilot+ page, Microsoft also says that Auto SR is only available in "a curated set of games" at release, suggesting that the feature requires per-game integration.

Read more
Sorry, Microsoft — I don’t want Copilot+ reading my DMs yet
Microsoft introducing the Recall feature in Windows 11.

Microsoft is kicking off a new era of PCs -- the Copilot+ era. It's a new category of device designed and built around AI, and the key selling point of a Copilot+ PC is the new Recall feature. I'm not quite on board with it yet, however.

Recall is a collection of several small language models that run on your device all the time. These models track everything you do, from messages and emails you send to where you navigate within Windows 11. And, as the name suggests, Copilot can recall this information whenever you need it, using it as bedrock context for how you interact with your PC.

Read more
The new Surface Laptop and Surface Pro are finally living up to their potential
The new Surface Pro on a table.

Copilot+ represents a new era for Windows laptops, and it's a fresh reimagining for Surface as well. You'll notice that the generational number in the name is gone with this new era -- one that comes with a new design, higher performance, and AI features.

Both the new Surface Laptop and Surface Pro come exclusively with up to a Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite, which brings massive leaps in performance, battery life, and AI capabilities over the previous generation of Surface devices.

Read more