- Oct 6, 2014
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and it's actually really a clever, best of a tough situation move by MS.
OK, so, what do we know about the release of the Surface Book? First, it was a HUGE surprise. Nobody predicted anything like what was revealed. Except, everyone predicted it. What do I mean? The rumors of the second, bigger SP4. Everyone talked about that, and everyone said "oh, the book was the bigger surface 4 the whole time" after the reveal. But, then how could that size get leaked so quickly without any other feature? Because the Surface Book was tested primarily without the keyboard. It was presented to most testers and employees as a bigger Surface Pro 4, and no mention of the keyboard was made. This explains how no GPU rumors were floated around, too.
So, Microsoft had to have just the higher-level engineers test the keyboard part of the Surface Book. This meant that the keyboard got enough testing to launch, but not enough to be totally bug-free. Then, it launches, and what happens? Almost all the bugs are related to integration between the keyboard and the main device, because most testing was done without the device. Why? So they wouldn't show their hand.
The good part of this? Microsoft was probably planning to tell all the other testers "test this keyboard base!" the moment the reveal was done. Thus, we shall probably soon see a lot of true fixes for these launch bugs, because this wasn't actually a surprise to the executives at all. They had a plan to fix this as soon as the problems appeared. Now that it is in consumer hands, the more rapid bug reports will probably be an immense help to repair of the current issues as well.
OK, so, what do we know about the release of the Surface Book? First, it was a HUGE surprise. Nobody predicted anything like what was revealed. Except, everyone predicted it. What do I mean? The rumors of the second, bigger SP4. Everyone talked about that, and everyone said "oh, the book was the bigger surface 4 the whole time" after the reveal. But, then how could that size get leaked so quickly without any other feature? Because the Surface Book was tested primarily without the keyboard. It was presented to most testers and employees as a bigger Surface Pro 4, and no mention of the keyboard was made. This explains how no GPU rumors were floated around, too.
So, Microsoft had to have just the higher-level engineers test the keyboard part of the Surface Book. This meant that the keyboard got enough testing to launch, but not enough to be totally bug-free. Then, it launches, and what happens? Almost all the bugs are related to integration between the keyboard and the main device, because most testing was done without the device. Why? So they wouldn't show their hand.
The good part of this? Microsoft was probably planning to tell all the other testers "test this keyboard base!" the moment the reveal was done. Thus, we shall probably soon see a lot of true fixes for these launch bugs, because this wasn't actually a surprise to the executives at all. They had a plan to fix this as soon as the problems appeared. Now that it is in consumer hands, the more rapid bug reports will probably be an immense help to repair of the current issues as well.