I'm interested in getting the community's feedback on recommended hardware (especially touch oriented displays) for developing Metro-style apps for Windows 8. In particular, I'm looking to purchase a touch display (maybe different sized displays?) that can be used to really play with the platform. I've been using mouse and keyboard and find it to be cumbersome in the Metro UI.

Does anyone have recommendations on good touch screens to purchase that would work for this kind of development and experimentation?

EDIT: I did find this link from the "Building Windows 8" blog: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/b8/archive/2011/09/13/experiencing-windows-8-touch-on-windows-7-hardware.aspx

Has anyone used these or other hardware not listed?

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The jury is out and I won't accept an answer just yet. I did purchase a Planar touchscreen monitor as a cheap way to add touch to my existing hardware. We'll see how useful that turns out to be. – Todd Price Sep 22 '11 at 2:40
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3 Answers

The HP Elitebook makes for a good convertible laptop with touch. It is what many of us at Microsoft are using.

Samsung announced their 7-series tablets which are very similar to the //build/ dev preview machines and should work fine.

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Looks like the Samsung Sliding PC 7 doesn't have a release date - which is a shame because it is so cool looking. So, it sounds like HP Elitebook convertible is way to go in the short term. Thanks! – westsider Sep 29 '11 at 22:24
Where does one go to get Windows 8 touch screen drivers for, say, HP EliteBook 2760p? Apologizes if this merits a new question but, having finally configured EliteBook to dual-boot and having installed Win8 Preview, I am finding that screen is non-responsive in Win8 (though fine in Win7). – westsider Dec 7 '11 at 23:44
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Try getting the drivers from HP's website. They should work. – Steve Rowe Dec 14 '11 at 8:55
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That Acer W500 might be a good low-end way to have a target device. I believe it can run 64-bit Windows but in any case 32-bit should run fine. I'm not sure it would make much of a dev platform itself though with 2GB of RAM and a 32GB SSD.

Close to $500 as opposed to "better" choices in the $1K and up range.

Just a thought. I see it is listed as one of the test lab devices

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Note: Since it uses AMD's C-50 which has integrated video Windows reports 1.6GB usable out of the 2GB present. Still good as a testing target but very marginal as any kind of development system. – Bob Riemersma Sep 23 '11 at 18:30
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