Tech

CNN anchors secretly use their Microsoft Surface tablets as iPad stands

Poor Microsoft.

Photo of Rob Price

Rob Price

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Won’t somebody please cut Microsoft a break? The former undisputed champion of consumer tech has found itself playing a game of catch-up with Apple over the past few years. The Silicon Valley veteran’s latest strategy for renewed relevancy is high-profile tie-ins with partners—but even this can backfire. 

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Case in point: Microsoft Surface’s recent tie-in with CNN for the 2014 midterm elections. Microsoft got some primetime TV coverage, CNN got some shiny new toys, everybody wins. Except, as GeekWire points out, the effect was undermined after people discoverd that the CNN anchors were using their lovely new Surfaces to hide a couple of Apple iPads.

Even the good people at CNN who have Microsoft surface tablets in their face hide iPad … – https://t.co/Sz6CpzLrEg pic.twitter.com/7Bam8uyI2G

— Melbourneer (@_Melbourneer_) November 5, 2014

CNN commentators using Microsoft @surface tablets as iPad stand. Facepalm. pic.twitter.com/BPxWTf2zhI

— Adam (@adamUCF) November 5, 2014

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Whoops.

Unfortunately for Microsoft, this isn’t the first time such a partnership has made them look the fool. A monumental $400 million deal with the NFL to supply tablets for teams and commentators backfired after pundits were caught using iPads despite promotional material featuring the Surface. Even worse: Commentators have described the Surface tablets as “iPads” over and over and over and over and over again.

And lastly, Chicago Bears quarterback Jay Culter went so far as to describe the tablets as “knockoff iPads” on national television. Oof.

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“iPad” is fast becoming a catch-all term for tablets—like “Hoover” or “Kleenex”—much to Microsoft’s chargrin. And that’s a kind of brand recognition that money—even 400 million bucks—can’t buy.

H/T Geekwire | Photo via Jason Howie/Flickr (CC BY 2.0) | Remix by Jason Reed 

 
The Daily Dot