Friday, November 30, 2012
Killing Them Softly
Synopsis
The film marks the second time director Andrew Dominik & Brad Pitt after "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford". The story is about three dumb guys who think they're smart rob a Mob protected card game, causing the local criminal economy to collapse. Brad Pitts plays the professional hitman who is hired to make some order out of the mess. It's a microcosm of the larger story of economic crisis unfolding in America at the time.
Director : Andrew Dominik
Cast : Brad Pitt, Richard Jenkins, James Gandolfini
Duration : 97 mins
Language : English (Chinese Subtitles)
Jan Dara: The Beginning
Synopsis
The lifelong tragedy of Jan Dara (Mario Maurer) begins the moment he was born. The year is 1915, a mother dies giving birth to her son. The boy is Jan Dara, and his father believes that the child is the reason for the death of his dear wife.
He curses the boy and vows to punish him with utmost severity. The name Jan is given to the boy, a short form Jan Rai – or The Scum.
The dark and disturbing secret is that the House is a playground of sexual excess. The master of the house, Jan’s father, is a man obsessed with carnal pleasure.
Fornication is his sport and routine, he would perform sexual acts of different variety with any female in the house any time he wants.
Jan Dara grows up in the giddy atmosphere of erotic indulgence, and soon he begins to seek pleasure of his own.
And the situation gets more complicated when Wisnan brings another woman into the house: a graceful, progressive woman who was Wisnan’s former lover and who will soon become involved with young Jan in a psychologically and physically complex way.
Director : ML Bhandevanop Devakula
Cast : Mario Maurer, Chayapol Julian Pupart, Sakarach Rirkthamrong
Duration : 136 mins
Language : Thai (Chinese & English Subtitles)
I Have To Buy New Shoes
Synopsis
Photographer Sen is to accompany his younger sister Suzume on a sight-seeing trip to Paris, having been told that he is along for good luck, but not being given a reason. Once they arrive in Paris, however, Suzume suddenly announces she needs to be on her own, and abandons Sen.
Lost and unable to find his way back to their hotel, Sen wanders the streets of Paris. He drops his passport, and Aoi, a freelance writer living in the city, steps on it. She breaks a heel which Sen fixes with crazy glue, then gives him directions to the Japanese embassy and a business card.
Director : Eriko Kitagawa
Cast : Miho Nakayama, Osamu Mukai
Duration : 115 mins
Language : Japanese (Chinese & English Subtitles)
House at the End of the Street
Synopsis
Directed by Mark Tonderai (Hush), House at the End of the Street is an edge-of-your-seat thriller that is to Psycho what Disturbia was to Rear Window.
A mother (Elisabeth Shue - Piranha 3D) and daughter (Jennifer Lawrence - Winter’s Bone) move in to a new community and find themselves next door to a house with a terrible past. Years ago, in a notorious incident, a psychotic young girl murdered her parents. While the locals insist the girl vanished after the brutal murders, the new arrivals quickly discover the sinister house’s story is far from over... and the daughter may become part of its dark legacy.
Director : Mark Tonderai
Cast : Jennifer Lawrence, Max Thieriot, Elizabeth Shue
Duration : 101 mins
Language : English (Chinese Subtitles)
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Back-to-School Shopping List: PeeChee Folder, Pencil Sharpener… New PC?
Face it parents, back-to-school supplies are just way more fun these days. Here’s a look at great technology products to outfit your student for the year ahead.
Back to school used to mean the smell of fresh pencil shavings, an undented lunch box, and the sharp crackling of new Velcro on that new Trapper Keeper.
Although those simple pleasures may still echo through the hallways, today’s students need a bit more in their backpacks to help them keep up with their studies. The latest Windows laptops and tablets can help them research that big science report, look up their grades online, and email their teacher about assignments. Even a new Windows phone can help by enabling them to stay in touch with classmates and coordinate after-school activities — and while they’re waiting for the bus, they just might sneak in a game or three All this cool, new technology could make anyone want to head back to school!
With that in mind, here’s a look at some helpful technology products to get students back to school and keep them on track with their studies. To sweeten the deal, students buying a new Windows PC worth US$699 or more before Sept. 9 can get a free Xbox!
Back to school used to mean the smell of fresh pencil shavings, an undented lunch box, and the sharp crackling of new Velcro on that new Trapper Keeper.
Although those simple pleasures may still echo through the hallways, today’s students need a bit more in their backpacks to help them keep up with their studies. The latest Windows laptops and tablets can help them research that big science report, look up their grades online, and email their teacher about assignments. Even a new Windows phone can help by enabling them to stay in touch with classmates and coordinate after-school activities — and while they’re waiting for the bus, they just might sneak in a game or three All this cool, new technology could make anyone want to head back to school!
With that in mind, here’s a look at some helpful technology products to get students back to school and keep them on track with their studies. To sweeten the deal, students buying a new Windows PC worth US$699 or more before Sept. 9 can get a free Xbox!
Clickable Artwork: Express Yourself With Microsoft Mice
Microsoft today announced the release of five new Limited Edition Artist Series mice and three bold, new colors. The new designs and colors represent the growing trend of technology as a form of self-expression in mobile computing.
You picked that snappy wardrobe, the trendy haircut, and the stylish art for your walls. There’s no reason, then, that self-expression should stop short of technology.
Today Microsoft Hardware is expanding its collection of Artist Series mice with the release of five new designs that help infuse color, life and personality into your computing experience.
The art of Calvin Ho, Dana McClure, Matt Lyon, Yellena James and Zansky – from Australia, New York, the United Kingdom, Portland, Oregon, and Brazil, respectively – will be printed on the Microsoft Wireless Mobile Mouse 3500 (US$29.95).
“We approached artists we really liked — some of which are emerging, and some of which have been around for a long time,” said Lindsey Kujawski, a user experience designer for Microsoft Hardware. “A lot of them are excited to work in a different medium than they’re used to. It’s such a cool thing for these artists to get their names out there, and to know that their work will be in people’s hands all over the world.”
Kujawski said Microsoft uses printing technologies that turn the mice into a blank canvas, and the art is transferred at very high resolutions.
“For someone who uses watercolors, we can even capture the texture of the watercolor painter. For a painter who uses a collage style, we can see the thickness of the paint,” she said. “It translates the artists’ work really well.”
The Wireless Mobile Mouse 3500 has an ambidextrous design; a two-color battery indicator light; 2.4Hz wireless connection; snap-in transceiver that can stay your computer’s USB or be stored in the bottom of the mouse; and BlueTrack technology to help the mouse work on virtually any surface, including a park bench, granite countertops, or the living room rug.
There are new mice available in solid colors, including cyan blue and magenta on the Wireless Mobile Mouse 3500 and both colors plus flame red on the Wireless Mobile Mouse 1000 (US$24.95).
The consumer appetite for stylish, expressive technology and technological accessories is on the rise, in part due to the growth of mobile computing, Kujawski said.
“As computers become smaller and smaller, we see people taking them out of the home more and more,” she said. “When they do that, they start to be aware of how their devices are a reflection of themselves. So you see people put more effort into making their technology reflect their personality, whether it’s an Artist Series mouse, a pink computer, or a bumper sticker. People use that as an outlet of self-expression — it’s really cool.”
Kujawski said Microsoft has a history of giving consumers options to customize their technology — the artist-inspired mice are just the latest.
“Microsoft was pretty early to the game — we’ve been dabbling in it for a while. At one point Microsoft even released a leather-covered mouse. There were also a couple of back-to-college campaigns where mice matched bedding and clothing,” she said.
Along with the rise in mobile computing, one of the turning points for technological self-expression is when Microsoft Hardware started being sold at lifestyle stores such as Target rather than solely at electronics stores, she said.
Whether people choose to personalize their hardware such as mice or keyboards, or personalize by customizing their user interface in Windows Phone or Windows 8, consumers want to be able to be unique, she said.
“Having the colors or artwork you want, but also having the setup you want — I think that’s really important to customers,” she said.
In fact, she believes style and personalization will be a key part of technology in the future.
“I think it’s integral,” she said. “It’s what customers are used to, and it’s what they expect. Their technology should feel natural and like their own, and Microsoft will always find a way to try to give customers that feeling.”
You picked that snappy wardrobe, the trendy haircut, and the stylish art for your walls. There’s no reason, then, that self-expression should stop short of technology.
Today Microsoft Hardware is expanding its collection of Artist Series mice with the release of five new designs that help infuse color, life and personality into your computing experience.
The art of Calvin Ho, Dana McClure, Matt Lyon, Yellena James and Zansky – from Australia, New York, the United Kingdom, Portland, Oregon, and Brazil, respectively – will be printed on the Microsoft Wireless Mobile Mouse 3500 (US$29.95).
“We approached artists we really liked — some of which are emerging, and some of which have been around for a long time,” said Lindsey Kujawski, a user experience designer for Microsoft Hardware. “A lot of them are excited to work in a different medium than they’re used to. It’s such a cool thing for these artists to get their names out there, and to know that their work will be in people’s hands all over the world.”
Kujawski said Microsoft uses printing technologies that turn the mice into a blank canvas, and the art is transferred at very high resolutions.
“For someone who uses watercolors, we can even capture the texture of the watercolor painter. For a painter who uses a collage style, we can see the thickness of the paint,” she said. “It translates the artists’ work really well.”
The Wireless Mobile Mouse 3500 has an ambidextrous design; a two-color battery indicator light; 2.4Hz wireless connection; snap-in transceiver that can stay your computer’s USB or be stored in the bottom of the mouse; and BlueTrack technology to help the mouse work on virtually any surface, including a park bench, granite countertops, or the living room rug.
There are new mice available in solid colors, including cyan blue and magenta on the Wireless Mobile Mouse 3500 and both colors plus flame red on the Wireless Mobile Mouse 1000 (US$24.95).
The consumer appetite for stylish, expressive technology and technological accessories is on the rise, in part due to the growth of mobile computing, Kujawski said.
“As computers become smaller and smaller, we see people taking them out of the home more and more,” she said. “When they do that, they start to be aware of how their devices are a reflection of themselves. So you see people put more effort into making their technology reflect their personality, whether it’s an Artist Series mouse, a pink computer, or a bumper sticker. People use that as an outlet of self-expression — it’s really cool.”
Kujawski said Microsoft has a history of giving consumers options to customize their technology — the artist-inspired mice are just the latest.
“Microsoft was pretty early to the game — we’ve been dabbling in it for a while. At one point Microsoft even released a leather-covered mouse. There were also a couple of back-to-college campaigns where mice matched bedding and clothing,” she said.
Along with the rise in mobile computing, one of the turning points for technological self-expression is when Microsoft Hardware started being sold at lifestyle stores such as Target rather than solely at electronics stores, she said.
Whether people choose to personalize their hardware such as mice or keyboards, or personalize by customizing their user interface in Windows Phone or Windows 8, consumers want to be able to be unique, she said.
“Having the colors or artwork you want, but also having the setup you want — I think that’s really important to customers,” she said.
In fact, she believes style and personalization will be a key part of technology in the future.
“I think it’s integral,” she said. “It’s what customers are used to, and it’s what they expect. Their technology should feel natural and like their own, and Microsoft will always find a way to try to give customers that feeling.”
Microsoft Hardware Debuts Windows 8 Keyboard With Split Backspace-Spacebar Key
Designed for productivity and comfort, the Sculpt Comfort Keyboard is the perfect Windows 8 desktop companion.
Building on its previously announced lineup of Windows 8 hardware peripherals, Microsoft Corp. today introduced the Sculpt Comfort Keyboard, an ergonomic keyboard featuring an enlarged split spacebar with optional backspace functionality that enhances typing efficiency and speed. From its thoughtful design and ergonomic shape to the Windows 8-specific keys, the Sculpt Comfort Keyboard is the perfect Windows 8 desktop companion for productivity and comfort.
Research and Design
With the Sculpt Comfort Keyboard, Microsoft is introducing its first keyboard to feature a split backspace-spacebar key. This design choice is the result of internal research that showed 90 percent of typists use only their right thumb to press the spacebar, leaving a lot of unused real estate on the left side of the bar. Research also showed the backspace key is the third most pressed key on the keyboard — behind the spacebar itself and the letter “e” — but constantly striking backspace breaks a person’s typing stride because of its location on the top right-hand corner of the keyboard. In response to these findings, Microsoft made two adjustments to help increase typing efficiency and speed:
• Increased the width of the spacebar to make the bar easier to strike.
• Split the spacebar to make use of the neglected left-hand side as an extra backspace key.
Ergonomics
The Sculpt Comfort Keyboard’s advanced ergonomics are the result of many unique design features. In addition to increasing typing efficiency, the keyboard’s split spacebar also improves ergonomics by virtually eliminating the awkward “pinky reach” to the standard backspace key, keeping wrists in a comfortable position. The keyboard also sports Microsoft’s own Contour Curve design, which features a six-degree bend in the keyboard layout with a dome-shaped arc to help promote a comfortable, neutral wrist position while keeping keys within easy reach. Its removable palm rest can be used for added comfort or easily detached with the press of a button for a sleek, compact look.
Designed by Microsoft, Optimized for Windows
The Sculpt Comfort Keyboard also includes several keys that give customers quick access to the most commonly used Windows 8 features, including Search, Share, Device and Settings hot keys and an updated Windows key. With its wireless USB connectivity, the Sculpt Comfort Keyboard also reduces the unnecessary clutter of wires.
“With Microsoft’s new lineup of Windows 8 peripherals, we designed every piece of hardware to provide the best Windows experience possible on any device,” said Brett Kelleran, general manager of Microsoft Hardware. “The Sculpt Comfort Keyboard brings the best of Microsoft to the desktop — advanced ergonomics, improved productivity, great design and features optimized for Windows.”
The Sculpt Comfort Keyboard will be available soon at the online Microsoft Store and other participating retailers. Estimated retail price is US$59.95.
About Microsoft Hardware
For 30 years, the Hardware Group has employed innovative engineering, cutting-edge industrial design and extensive usability testing to create products of exceptional quality and durability that enhance the software experience and strengthen the connection between customers and their PCs. Microsoft Hardware leads the industry in ergonomic engineering, industrial design and hardware-software compatibility, offering customers an easier, more convenient and more enjoyable computing experience.
About Microsoft
Founded in 1975, Microsoft (Nasdaq “MSFT”) is the worldwide leader in software, services and solutions that help people and businesses realize their full potential.
Building on its previously announced lineup of Windows 8 hardware peripherals, Microsoft Corp. today introduced the Sculpt Comfort Keyboard, an ergonomic keyboard featuring an enlarged split spacebar with optional backspace functionality that enhances typing efficiency and speed. From its thoughtful design and ergonomic shape to the Windows 8-specific keys, the Sculpt Comfort Keyboard is the perfect Windows 8 desktop companion for productivity and comfort.
Research and Design
With the Sculpt Comfort Keyboard, Microsoft is introducing its first keyboard to feature a split backspace-spacebar key. This design choice is the result of internal research that showed 90 percent of typists use only their right thumb to press the spacebar, leaving a lot of unused real estate on the left side of the bar. Research also showed the backspace key is the third most pressed key on the keyboard — behind the spacebar itself and the letter “e” — but constantly striking backspace breaks a person’s typing stride because of its location on the top right-hand corner of the keyboard. In response to these findings, Microsoft made two adjustments to help increase typing efficiency and speed:
• Increased the width of the spacebar to make the bar easier to strike.
• Split the spacebar to make use of the neglected left-hand side as an extra backspace key.
Ergonomics
The Sculpt Comfort Keyboard’s advanced ergonomics are the result of many unique design features. In addition to increasing typing efficiency, the keyboard’s split spacebar also improves ergonomics by virtually eliminating the awkward “pinky reach” to the standard backspace key, keeping wrists in a comfortable position. The keyboard also sports Microsoft’s own Contour Curve design, which features a six-degree bend in the keyboard layout with a dome-shaped arc to help promote a comfortable, neutral wrist position while keeping keys within easy reach. Its removable palm rest can be used for added comfort or easily detached with the press of a button for a sleek, compact look.
Designed by Microsoft, Optimized for Windows
The Sculpt Comfort Keyboard also includes several keys that give customers quick access to the most commonly used Windows 8 features, including Search, Share, Device and Settings hot keys and an updated Windows key. With its wireless USB connectivity, the Sculpt Comfort Keyboard also reduces the unnecessary clutter of wires.
“With Microsoft’s new lineup of Windows 8 peripherals, we designed every piece of hardware to provide the best Windows experience possible on any device,” said Brett Kelleran, general manager of Microsoft Hardware. “The Sculpt Comfort Keyboard brings the best of Microsoft to the desktop — advanced ergonomics, improved productivity, great design and features optimized for Windows.”
The Sculpt Comfort Keyboard will be available soon at the online Microsoft Store and other participating retailers. Estimated retail price is US$59.95.
About Microsoft Hardware
For 30 years, the Hardware Group has employed innovative engineering, cutting-edge industrial design and extensive usability testing to create products of exceptional quality and durability that enhance the software experience and strengthen the connection between customers and their PCs. Microsoft Hardware leads the industry in ergonomic engineering, industrial design and hardware-software compatibility, offering customers an easier, more convenient and more enjoyable computing experience.
About Microsoft
Founded in 1975, Microsoft (Nasdaq “MSFT”) is the worldwide leader in software, services and solutions that help people and businesses realize their full potential.
Type in Comfort With New Windows 8 Keyboard
Microsoft unveils the Windows 8-enabled Sculpt Comfort Keyboard, which joins a growing number of peripherals aimed at delivering a healthy computing experience.
Logging long hours at a computer is a bit like running a marathon, only it’s your fingers and forearms that pound the proverbial pavement – and most of us return to the starting line the very next day.
Like a marathon, all that typing can cause pain. Left unchecked it can become a repetitive stress injury (RSI). So just as runners need the right shoes, office workers need the right equipment to comfortably grind out the miles.
Today, Microsoft Hardware announced the newest member of its ergonomic lineup, the Windows 8-enabled Sculpt Comfort Keyboard. The keyboard includes a number of ergonomic features designed for maximum comfort and efficiency, including a contoured layout, a detachable padded palm rest, and a split backspace-spacebar key.
The Sculpt Comfort Keyboard is part of Microsoft Hardware’s ongoing efforts to keep its customers comfortable as they spend ever-increasing hours on their computers, says Suneel Goud, senior product marketing manager in Microsoft Hardware.
“At the end of the day, we want our customers to have a great computing experience,” Goud says. “And that comes from both the software experience and the hardware peripherals used to interface with the computer. Our lineup of keyboards and mice are designed to keep our customers comfortable and to keep them healthy by helping to reduce the risks associated with repetitive stress injuries.”
For businesses, ergonomics can have big economic implications. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration estimates that RSIs cost employers US$15-20 billion a year, with employees missing an average of 12 days of work and making US$38,500 in worker’s comp claims.
Goud encourages everyone to take a look at Microsoft Hardware’s ergonomic lineup and create a comfortable workstation for themselves. Certified ergonomists help design, test and approve peripherals from Microsoft Hardware, and the Sculpt Comfort Keyboard reflects a vast body of research. For example, it’s the first Microsoft keyboard to feature a split backspace-spacebar key. Internal research at Microsoft shows that more than 90 percent of people hit the spacebar with their right thumb, leaving the left side virtually untouched. (Go ahead, look at your keyboard – you’ll probably notice a shiny spot on the right-hand side where your thumb strikes.) That’s a lot of wasted real estate.
At the same time, the backspace key is the third-most used on the keyboard – perhaps a comment on our collective typing skills – trailing only the spacebar itself and the letter ‘e.’ These statistics led Microsoft to split the spacebar and add optional backspace functionality into the left-hand side. The result aims to improve both ergonomics and typing efficiency.
(If all that change is overwhelming, don’t worry. The default mode is the standard keyboard set up we’ve used for years; customers must activate the split functionality.)
Microsoft also increased the actual size of the space bar, making it easier to strike, since it’s the most frequently used key; included a palm lift to straighten and support wrists; and added Windows 8 hot keys so customers can quickly search, share, access device settings and more with the tap of a finger.
Goud notes that RSIs are often the accumulation of smaller injuries, and people often neglect the warning signs. He speaks from experience. When Goud first joined Microsoft on the U.S. Retail team, he noticed carpal tunnel syndrome symptoms. He ignored them for a while, then started taking frequent breaks. Finally he picked up the Microsoft Natural Desktop Ergonomic 7000 keyboard.
The pain went away and never came back.
Logging long hours at a computer is a bit like running a marathon, only it’s your fingers and forearms that pound the proverbial pavement – and most of us return to the starting line the very next day.
Like a marathon, all that typing can cause pain. Left unchecked it can become a repetitive stress injury (RSI). So just as runners need the right shoes, office workers need the right equipment to comfortably grind out the miles.
Today, Microsoft Hardware announced the newest member of its ergonomic lineup, the Windows 8-enabled Sculpt Comfort Keyboard. The keyboard includes a number of ergonomic features designed for maximum comfort and efficiency, including a contoured layout, a detachable padded palm rest, and a split backspace-spacebar key.
The Sculpt Comfort Keyboard is part of Microsoft Hardware’s ongoing efforts to keep its customers comfortable as they spend ever-increasing hours on their computers, says Suneel Goud, senior product marketing manager in Microsoft Hardware.
“At the end of the day, we want our customers to have a great computing experience,” Goud says. “And that comes from both the software experience and the hardware peripherals used to interface with the computer. Our lineup of keyboards and mice are designed to keep our customers comfortable and to keep them healthy by helping to reduce the risks associated with repetitive stress injuries.”
For businesses, ergonomics can have big economic implications. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration estimates that RSIs cost employers US$15-20 billion a year, with employees missing an average of 12 days of work and making US$38,500 in worker’s comp claims.
Goud encourages everyone to take a look at Microsoft Hardware’s ergonomic lineup and create a comfortable workstation for themselves. Certified ergonomists help design, test and approve peripherals from Microsoft Hardware, and the Sculpt Comfort Keyboard reflects a vast body of research. For example, it’s the first Microsoft keyboard to feature a split backspace-spacebar key. Internal research at Microsoft shows that more than 90 percent of people hit the spacebar with their right thumb, leaving the left side virtually untouched. (Go ahead, look at your keyboard – you’ll probably notice a shiny spot on the right-hand side where your thumb strikes.) That’s a lot of wasted real estate.
At the same time, the backspace key is the third-most used on the keyboard – perhaps a comment on our collective typing skills – trailing only the spacebar itself and the letter ‘e.’ These statistics led Microsoft to split the spacebar and add optional backspace functionality into the left-hand side. The result aims to improve both ergonomics and typing efficiency.
(If all that change is overwhelming, don’t worry. The default mode is the standard keyboard set up we’ve used for years; customers must activate the split functionality.)
Microsoft also increased the actual size of the space bar, making it easier to strike, since it’s the most frequently used key; included a palm lift to straighten and support wrists; and added Windows 8 hot keys so customers can quickly search, share, access device settings and more with the tap of a finger.
Goud notes that RSIs are often the accumulation of smaller injuries, and people often neglect the warning signs. He speaks from experience. When Goud first joined Microsoft on the U.S. Retail team, he noticed carpal tunnel syndrome symptoms. He ignored them for a while, then started taking frequent breaks. Finally he picked up the Microsoft Natural Desktop Ergonomic 7000 keyboard.
The pain went away and never came back.
Microsoft Surface Now Available at Microsoft Retail Stores
With the global availability of Windows 8 and Windows RT, customers can buy Microsoft Surface at 27 retail and 34 holiday stores in the U.S. and Canada.
Microsoft Corp. today announced that its new PC, Microsoft Surface, is now available for purchase at all Microsoft retail, holiday and online stores in the United States and Canada. Designed to be the ultimate stage for Windows RT, Surface is unique and represents exceptional value, providing an immersive entertainment experience and a foundation for getting things done. With a starting price of US$499, Surface will be available online at http://www.microsoftstore.com in Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States. In China and Hong Kong, Surface will be available online at Suning.
A variety of Surface accessories are also available for purchase, including Touch Covers in five vibrant colors — black, white, magenta, cyan and red — priced at US$119.99, so customers can express their personal style. Customers also have the option to purchase a Type Cover in black for US$129.99, which adds moving keys for a more traditional typing feel.
At all Microsoft retail and holiday store locations, knowledgeable staff are on hand to answer questions and help with Windows RT and Surface setup, so customers can have a great out-of-the-box experience and walk out the door with a product that is personalized for them.
First unveiled in June, Surface represents an extension of the Windows experience, letting customers work, play and connect with others. From its ultralight durable casing, integrated kickstand and Touch Cover, which allow customers to be productive anywhere, to a full-sized USB port, 16:9 widescreen, high-definition display and 22-degree angle that make it optimal for viewing and sharing content easily, Surface lets customers seamlessly transition between entertainment and creation.
Microsoft Corp. today announced that its new PC, Microsoft Surface, is now available for purchase at all Microsoft retail, holiday and online stores in the United States and Canada. Designed to be the ultimate stage for Windows RT, Surface is unique and represents exceptional value, providing an immersive entertainment experience and a foundation for getting things done. With a starting price of US$499, Surface will be available online at http://www.microsoftstore.com in Australia, Canada, China, France, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States. In China and Hong Kong, Surface will be available online at Suning.
A variety of Surface accessories are also available for purchase, including Touch Covers in five vibrant colors — black, white, magenta, cyan and red — priced at US$119.99, so customers can express their personal style. Customers also have the option to purchase a Type Cover in black for US$129.99, which adds moving keys for a more traditional typing feel.
At all Microsoft retail and holiday store locations, knowledgeable staff are on hand to answer questions and help with Windows RT and Surface setup, so customers can have a great out-of-the-box experience and walk out the door with a product that is personalized for them.
First unveiled in June, Surface represents an extension of the Windows experience, letting customers work, play and connect with others. From its ultralight durable casing, integrated kickstand and Touch Cover, which allow customers to be productive anywhere, to a full-sized USB port, 16:9 widescreen, high-definition display and 22-degree angle that make it optimal for viewing and sharing content easily, Surface lets customers seamlessly transition between entertainment and creation.
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