Design company Incase will revive Microsoft's PC peripheral business in 2024
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- January 06, 2024
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In context: Despite being one of the biggest companies in the software industry, Microsoft has sold PC peripherals for three decades. The company plans to leave that market, but the "Microsoft" brand will remain on many computer accessories for years to come. Microsoft was one of the first corporations to bring affordable hardware wonders like the mouse to PC users in the 1980s.
Hardware has changed, and competition has increased since then, making it hard for the Redmond giant to justify the resource expenditure against its more modern hardware offerings like its Surface line. Last year, Microsoft unsurprisingly announced it was leaving the PC accessory market to focus exclusively on its Surface brand of computers.
However, it didn't indicate what it would do with its peripheral division. A recent announcement from Incase indicates that the Microsoft brand will remain on the market from 2024 forward. The design driven company, which already makes and markets computer bags and other accessories, entered a "strategic partnership" with Microsoft that will allow it to offer a line of products dubbed "Incase Designed by Microsoft." The company will start selling a brand new line of computer accessories, preserving Microsoft's 30 year legacy of "expertise and innovation" with Incase's focus on performance and style.
Since Redmond is not completely spinning off its division, fans of traditional (or not so traditional) Microsoft designs for PC peripherals will still see new branded offerings coming later this year. Incase revealed the first 23 "Designed by Microsoft" computer accessories on its website.
The list includes various keyboard styles, wireless mice, headsets, audio docks, webcams, and more. Further details about prices and release dates are undisclosed, but here is what is confirmed for release: Compared to products directly sold by Microsoft in the past few years, the only notable difference of the new peripheral line seems to be Incase's leaf shaped logo printed on the plastic frame.
The company wants to sell "high quality" Microsoft accessories to creatives and professional teams, providing a better experience through "good design.".
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