While browsing through the Windows Central forums, I cam across this post which I found very interesting



http://forums.windowscentral.com/windows-10-mobile/422588-can-idea-make-windows-10-mobile-success.html

I mostly agree with what he is saying regarding Microsoft having a better chance of getting more Universal Apps if they launch "Windows 10 RT" laptops which can run only the Universal Apps from the Windows Store. If Microsoft or the windows hardware partners can sell enough of these devices, then it will indeed make companies like Google develop Universal Apps to target these devices as the traditional desktop apps will not work in these devices.



The other point I agree with the above post is regarding "Windows 10 RT" laptops being a better competitor for Chromebooks than the traditional full fledged Windows 10 laptops. I think "Windows 10 RT" laptops, if launched, can be a better option for educational institutions than Chromebooks. Office Universal Apps alone will attract a lot of customers away from Chromebooks.(Even on my current laptop, I have uninstalled the Office 2016 desktop apps and installed only Word, excel and Powerpoint Universal Apps from the Windows Store. Feels so much faster to use them instead of the desktop apps)



I would TOTALLY buy a 14 or 15 inch "Windows 10 RT" laptop with Snapdragon 820 and 4GB RAM if it's well built like Surface Pro devices and priced below $400-$500. ARM processor means slim devices, no fans, long battery life.



What do you guys think? Do "Windows 10 RT" devices work well in the market if priced below $300-$400?

Reticulating poll splines...