Good article, but I think it takes a short-view of the future of Microsoft.<p>Microsoft can't continue charging the OS prices they charged in the past. Android on tablets and the potential for Chrome to take a big bite out of their bread and butter business in the next 10 years is a huge risk. I believe Microsoft recognizes the threat, and is throwing everything they've got at maintaining their market dominance in the OS race in order to just be in the race in the future.<p>Also, I'm not sure I agree that there is no profit in the surface. Though the author could be correct that the $499 version without the cover could have low or 0 margin, I doubt many people are going to by the coverless version. I suspect that was a marketing decision so they can have a $499 tablet, but realistically, 95% of consumers are going to by a cover, and if the keyboard cover is a great product, it makes sense that would be the default purchase.
Surface might make less money than an OEM license for RT would have, but there's no way another company could drive the tablet sales that Surface will.<p>With the increased adoption, their cut from Windows Store software sales should make up for some initial shortfalls.
<i>The $499 price means Microsoft will not make any real margin on the Surface.</i><p>So Apple is making a killing selling the iPad for $499 but Microsoft is making <i>no</i> margin on the Surface RT at the same price? Is Apple's supply chain really that much more efficient? If Microsoft can't even make money at price parity with Apple what chance do they have in this market?
"It is not a “Microsoft business” (Microsoft businesses generate $5B+ a year in PROFIT). The Windows business makes $11.4B in PROFIT every year."<p>Isn't Windows a subset of Microsoft's business? If so, how can a part of the business generate more profit than the whole business?