The Microsoft Surface Pro, alongside last year's Windows RT Microsoft Surface, are Microsoft's self-made Windows 8 tablets, designed to attempt to reinvent computing and provide hero products for Windows 8. The Surface Pro was supposed to launch within 90 days of the Surface, which came out on October 26. We're approaching the end of that window now, and I got my first chance to see the Surface Pro for myself this week. Despite my skepticism, you can color me impressed.
Of course, Windows tablets aren't new. Their limiting factors have been many: inferior touch screens and touch software on older Windows 7 devices, poor battery life, and limited peripheral connectivity have relegated many Windows tablets to being afterthoughts. Even recent full Windows 8 tablets from Lenovo and others have opted for Atom-based CPUs which theoretically add battery life, but limit processing power.
However, in my time with the Surface, it all worked exactly as advertised, and with a extremely elegant, bordering on beautiful, sense of design. The industrial magnesium chassis of the Surface Pro feels solid but not too heavy to hold in one hand. One notable difference between it and the slightly thinner RT version of the Surface is a hairline wraparound vent on the rear that works with internal fans to keep the more powerful CPU running smoothly. The Surface Pro felt slightly warm as I used it, but no more so than a third-gen iPad.
The 1080p IPS 10.6-inch display is one of the best I've ever seen on a small Windows computer. Even better, capacitive multitouch felt buttery-smooth. That's the magic that made the iPhone and iPad so fun to use, and the Surface Pro, in painting programs and a few other apps I tried, felt comfortable to navigate.
The Surface Pro supports pressure-sensitive styli, and Microsoft has its own Surface Pen Pro that magnetically attaches to the power connector to hold it in place on the go. Writing and sketching felt natural, and palm-rejection technology activates the moment the Surface Pro senses the stylus approaching the screen.
For a spec comparison between the Surface and Surface Pro, see below.
The Surface Pro supports pressure-sensitive styli, and Microsoft has its own Surface Pen Pro that magnetically attaches to the power connector to hold it in place on the go. Writing and sketching felt natural, and palm-rejection technology activates the moment the Surface Pro senses the stylus approaching the screen.
For a spec comparison between the Surface and Surface Pro, see below.
Surface with Windows 8 Pro | Surface with Windows RT | |
---|---|---|
Starting price | $899 | $499 |
Screen size and resolution | 10.6 inches, 1,920x1,080 | 10.6 inches, 1,366x768 |
Dimensions (HWD) | 10.81 x 6.81 x 0.53 inches | 10.81 x 6.77 x 0.37 inches |
Weight | 2 pounds | 1.5 pounds |
CPU | Intel Core i5 | Nvidia Tegra 3 |
Memory | 4GB | 2GB |
Storage capacity | 64GB (128GB option) | 32GB (64GB option) |
Ports | USB 3.0, microSDXC, headphone, DisplayPort video out | USB 2.0, microSDXC, headphone, HD video out |
Whether the Surface Pro is the best product in its price range will be determined. We've already seen a number of hybrid and convertible laptop/tablet designs from Microsoft's usual hardware partners, including the Lenovo Yoga 11S, the HP Elitebook Revolve, and the ThinkPad Helix, not to mention more experimental gaming-centric devices like the Razer Edge. And, with Intel's newer processors coming out on the horizon, you'd have to wonder whether the Surface Pro could be refreshed to benefit from even more tablet-ready CPUs.
The Surface Pro will compete with those devices and others. But, based on how good that Type Cover is and how good the Surface Pro's screen feels -- not to mention its small size -- the Surface Pro seems well-positioned to rise to the top of the pack. From the moment the Surface was announced, the real killer feature was the Type Cover. To me, the success or failure of the Surface hinges on the ability of that cover to be comfortable and productive. And I think it is. It also draws power from the tablet, never needs recharging, and has a grip strong enough to hold the whole Surface tablet from the cover alone.
Can a tablet comfortably be your full PC? So far, when it comes to my limited time with Surface Pro, the answer seems to be yes. And that could, in the long run, be the most impactful development in PCs in years.
We'll find out definitively once we have a chance to test the Surface Pro when it ships -- hopefully, soon.
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