Microsoft Surface Pro Reviews Arrive 320
The release date is approaching for Microsoft's Surface Pro tablet, and reviews for the new device have started appearing. The Surface Pro differs from the Surface in that it runs a full version of Windows 8 Pro, rather than the tablet-centric Windows RT. It also has much beefier hardware specs: 4GB RAM, an Intel Core i5 CPU, and a full HD display with 10-point multitouch. Ars describes it as having the expected good performance at the expected costs of heat, noise, and battery life. "This is not an all-day machine. Surface RT probably is. But Surface Pro is not." The review praises the screen and the stylus, but points out some odd scaling issues as well. The Verge's review also mentions the scaling, and notes the strangeness of dealing with issues inherent to a Windows desktop OS — like antivirus — on a tablet. BGR looks at the big picture, calling the Surface Pro Microsoft's "declaration of war" on its hardware partners. All three reviews dwell on how the Surface Pro exists at the intersection of laptop and tablet, and doesn't quite fulfill either role. Ars says, "From the tablet perspective, Surface Pro is not acceptable. It gets too hot for a hand-held device, its battery life is woefully inadequate, and it's too thick and heavy to be comfortable to hand hold for long sessions. ... From a laptop perspective, Surface Pro falls down too. The traditional laptop has a stiff hinge to hold the screen at an angle of your choosing. ... In practice, the Surface RT and Surface Pro have a bigger footprint on my lap even than my old 15-inch MacBook Pro. And if I move a little, whomp, the screen drops off the back of my knees and folds out of sight." The Verge adds, "The real dealbreaker for me was that it's just unusable in my most common position — sitting on my couch, feet on the coffee table, with the computer on my lap."
Waiting until Haswell and beyond (Score:2, Interesting)
This has potential to rid me of having a separate computer and tablet. The current Pro seems like it will work as a development platform for future applications; the consumers will start buying it more once it gets thinner and lighter.
Can I just ask (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Can I just ask (Score:5, Insightful)
I can think of 3 reasons why not:
1. OMG, shiny!
2. Apple did it, so it must be awesome!
3. All those executives bought them, and they can't all be wrong, right?
Now, of course, none of those are good reasons, but this is all about marketing, and marketing doesn't aim for good reasons.
Re:Can I just ask (Score:5, Insightful)
Why not buy a laptop?
Indeed - especially with all those nice ultrabooks around that are barely bigger, heavier or more expensive than this.
This device does not exist because there is a need or demand for a tablet-laptop halfbreed. It exists because Microsoft's only hope of breaking into the tablet market is to convince people that they need a tablet that can run legacy Windows apps. That's the only USP that Microsoft can offer, arriving this late to the party.
Yet all the evidence from the success of the iPad and the failure of WIndows Tablet Edition points to the contrary: a tablet has less functionality than a laptop by design and what people need is software that has been designed from the ground up for touchscreen use.
Of course, Microsoft has a lot of marketing clout and are big enough to survive a few false starts, so I wouldn't count them out just yet. If they were like any other company they'd have been bankrupted by Vista and the Office Ribbon.
Re:Can I just ask (Score:5, Funny)
demand for a tablet-laptop halfbreed
Aha! What would make these things sell is a better name for them: the tabtop? Or the laplet?? ;)
Laptop==no stylus==no thanks (was Re:Can I just..) (Score:2)
Because I'm currently using a Fujitsu Stylistic ST-4121 running Windows XP Tablet PC Edition and need to keep my Wacom stylus --- I use it for:
- annotating .pdfs
- drawing and sketching using ArtRage, Autodesk SketchBook, FutureWave SmartSketch, Creaturehouse Expression and Macromedia FreeHand
- designing fonts using FontForge
- lightweight programming using Runtime Revolution (I find drawing interface elements easier w/ the stylus)
- writing papers using LyX and WinTeXsh
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Because I'm currently using a Fujitsu Stylistic ST-4121 running Windows XP Tablet PC Edition and need to keep my Wacom stylus
That's OK, you have an upgrade path to the extremely reasonably priced when refurbished Fujitsu Lifebook T900. ~900 for Core i7, 4GB RAM, Win7, and combo 8-way multitouch and wacom pen. After much hemming and hawing that's what I selected as my lady's next (now current) laptop and while it's a little chunky and heavy for a laptop, it's a fantastic machine for art, and it has a replaceable battery. This would be a much better move for you than Surface, because it's much less of a ripoff and you won't be forc
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I don't want chunky and heavy --- I see no reason to haul around a keyboard and optical drive I almost never use (I have docking stations for when I want to use it at a desk at work or home) and it wouldn't fit in my favourite laptop bag which I've been using for about 2 decades now, and don't want to replace.
Re:Laptop==no stylus==no thanks (was Re:Can I just (Score:5, Informative)
Forget the Surface Pro - get an Atom-based Win8 tablet. I'm quite satisfied with mine (ATIV Smart PC): easily gets 10 hours of battery life during PDF annotation or OneNote (usually more - I haven't gotten it below 50% in a workday yet), sufficiently thin and light so as not to be noticeable in a bag, and Wacom stylus tech.
I'm coming from a Thinkpad X41T, which had a bit more CPU grunt than that ST-4121 of yours, and the Clover Trail Atom is quite a bit faster than the Pentium M in the X41T... so you should be fine in terms of processing power as well.
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One this that I like in a table is all day, meaning 7-10 hours, of battery life for light use, and a small charger, meaning USB, so I don't have all that extra bulk to carry around.
I have seen tables used as point of sale in shops. It could be that the surface would work there.
Re:Can I just ask (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually, you'll be hard pressed to find more than one or two other laptops on the entire market which have an IPS screen, even if you ignore the fact that this has both a capacitive and a Wacom stylus screen. You'll also have a difficult time finding a similarly sized (i5, 4GB RAM) laptop with more than 6 hours of actual battery life (not "rated") that is still under 2 lbs. Realize also that for $40 you can get an external battery pack that has enough juice to take this device past 8 hours total runtime (though the connector market hasn't caught up yet).
This is actually very close to the perfect device for someone who works occassionally on a netbook or small ultrabook, but also carries a tablet (because reading or watching entertainment on a netbook is a non-starter).
I found the reviews funny. If I'm lounging on the sofa, I'm probably consuming content and I much prefer the tablet form factor. If I'm doing work, I'm almost certainly sitting at a table, in which case the built in stand kicks the shit out of all the lousy, bulky cases needed for a tablet to stand up. To complain that it doesn't work as well as a laptop computer when you're in a location where a tablet is a better form factor is just laughable.
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My Nexus 7 has a USB port. It is micro-USB, but adaptors are not exactly new.
Ridiculous hyperbole... FFS (Score:4, Interesting)
If Google comes out with a phone or tablet it's simply fostering adoption and providing some reference for other hardware makers, if Micro$oft does it they're "declaring war" on their hardware partners. Utter stupidity.
Also, why would anyone think the Surface Pro was supposed to run on battery all day...? Clearly this is a workstation/tablet hybrid that leans farther to the tablet side.
In the longer run Intel will have move entirely into this market, and you'll find that people no longer have PCs at the office, they've got 'surface pro 3' with full blown M$ Office on it - and by that time it will run 10 hours on a charge.
Personally I thought this was going to happen sooner via systems like the Atrix phone and dock - they tried this at SIEMENS a few years back but Android was really the blocking issue, not the hardware. I love my Android phone, but as a full blown operating system it's got a long way to go.
Re:Ridiculous hyperbole... FFS (Score:4, Insightful)
There's a key difference: Google devices are built by partners, though they are marketed (badly) by Google. Surface devices are built directly by MS.
Re: (Score:3)
I think that's a case of semantics ;).
The Google 'partner' that builds the phone isn't making a profit anymore than the actual manufacturer making the RT and Pro, plus they aren't 'marketed badly' by Google - that's is not their purpose. Neither is it the purpose of the Surface RT or Surface Pro.
It's like complaining back when nVidia and ATI made cards that they were poisoning their hardware partners when nothing could be further from the truth (they no longer need to do this because of the ubiquity of the
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I should hope they are, otherwise they're going to go out of business.
They may not be making all of the profits, but if they're doing manufacturing without making any profit, they'd be idiots.
But Microsoft has typically let their partners design the boxes to run Windows, with this Microsoft is entering actually designing and selling Microsoft branded hardware. Except for keyboards and
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It's why I said "any more". Neither group is getting the types of profits that would expected from a direct retail offering of their own.
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While you may be correct, in this case because of Microsoft's nearly 40 year history as not really being a computer hardware vendor (not talking about mice here), they are telling those they partnered with for decades that their products are inferior and Microsoft can do it better.
Google hasn
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But hey, your opinion is as good as anyone's.
A man's reach should exceed his grasp... ;)
Re:Ridiculous hyperbole... FFS (Score:5, Informative)
I agree and the summary is very negatively biased. I clicked through to the BGR article expecting to find a scathing summary, when in fact it was quite the opposite.
"On an island, the Surface Pro is a fantastic premium computer that is portable, versatile and capable. It is priced fairly and it offers novel features that provide clear advantages over rival devices. But in a market where interest in personal computers is declining and Windows 8 is struggling to gain traction, I fear the Surface Pro might not be the right product right now.
The Surface Pro is not good fit for everyone, but those who do purchase Microsoft’s new tablet for work or for personal use — whether they number in the thousands, hundreds of thousands, or millions — will not be disappointed."
Re:Ridiculous hyperbole... FFS (Score:5, Insightful)
and you'll find that people no longer have PCs at the office, they've got 'surface pro 3' with full blown M$ Office on it - and by that time it will run 10 hours on a charge.
From what I've seen, I'm sure some technology execs are smoking the same thing you are. However, I see no point in the future where a tablet is going to replace my workstation. I can see myself having a tablet to augment my workstation (e.g. having manuals on a tablet instead of on paper), but the actual work is always going to be done on a proper computer.
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What exactly do you consider a proper computer?
What do you mean by actual work?
I have a dual hex core (24 hardware threads) 26GB dev box in my office, a new Mac Mini, and a Dell Touch screen all-in-one - I develop on all of them.
The majority of people at a company (that isn't an ISV) don't need anything more powerful than an iPad to do everything they've got to do.
The Surface Pro is going to give them an iPad-ish form factor except it will run Windows 7/8 software that already exists - That's a pretty huge
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If it indeed runs too hot to hold in hand, then no, there is no hyperbole.
Yeah, the imaginary tablet in your mind will perhaps be much better, if and when it exists, but Surface Pro, the product in actual existence, the product this submission is about, is a heavy, overheating piece of shit.
TL;DR No hyperbole, Surface pro is crap.
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If it indeed runs too hot to hold in hand, then no, there is no hyperbole.
I haven't seen a review that says anything bad about heat, I've read and heard that if you lay it down on a blanket it can get hot.
Hell, I have a Macbook Air that gets lava hot if you do any OpenGL work on it.
BTW, the hyperbole was in reference to the "declaring war" sentiment.
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Also, why would anyone think the Surface Pro was supposed to run on battery all day...? Clearly this is a workstation/tablet hybrid that leans farther to the tablet side.
Because carrying around a power supply is antiquated. Why would you buy a device that needs to be charged more than once a day (i.e. over night)?
Re: (Score:3)
"First they came for the communists, and I didn't speak out because I wasn't a communist..."
Plus, what exactly are you referring to as crap?
The hardware's not crap - although it doesn't serve my needs.
The OS isn't crap - although I primarily use *nix.
MS is trying to invent a hardware category (Score:5, Insightful)
I think people want a tablet that they can use a keyboard on, but I don't think that this is it. MS has tried for over a decade to convince us it's was of doing a tablet is the right way - and it has been a failure.
I haven't seen any enterprises adopting them, so I am unsure where they actually plan to sell them
I don't think the surface is a "bad idea" it is just terribly executed.
Re:MS is trying to invent a hardware category (Score:5, Interesting)
"For the price of it, you can get an awesome ultrabook."
Which ultrabooks have a 600dpi pressure/angle/tilt sensitive stylus on a 1920x1080 screen?
"You can also get a comparable tablet for a lot less."
A tablet with an Intel i5 CPU, HD4000 GPU and 4GB of RAM for less money, even without the digitiser? Pray, do enlighten us.
Wacom charge a thousand bucks for their lower-resolution Cintiq 12WX screen-based digitiser tablet and that's without any computer behind it, just an input/display device. That's what's tempting me to splash out on a Pro when it is released although I may have to get a grey-market unit since there's no firm date for it going on sale here in the UK.
Re:MS is trying to invent a hardware category (Score:4, Informative)
Wacom charge a thousand bucks for their lower-resolution Cintiq 12WX screen-based digitiser tablet and that's without any computer behind it, just an input/display device.
For $900 you can get a refurb'd Fujitsu Lifebook T900 with 4GB RAM, Windows 7, and a 13" combo digitizer (mediocre resolution, I admit) with a combo wacom with 8-way multitouch and pen/whatever, with the pen stored in the unit. It's only slightly more ugly than a cintiq and it's a convertible tablet. Oh, did I mention for that price you get an i7? Cintiq is the worst ripoff ever.
Re: (Score:3)
The T900 has a 1280x800 screen and weighs 2.4kg whereas the Surface Pro is 1920x1080 and weighs under a kilo. The pics I've seen in reviews suggest the T900's pen is wired to the base unit but it's not too clear -- the Pro's pen is of course wireless.
I'd really be interested to find out if the Pro will work with the extended range of art pens Cintiq have on offer.
Better Devices for a Sixth of the Price (Score:2, Insightful)
A tablet with an Intel i5 CPU, HD4000 GPU and 4GB of RAM for less money, even without the digitiser? Pray, do enlighten us.
Absolutely the quieter, cooler, more portable, with an efficient CPU Nexus 7 for a sixth of the price.
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if you go that way hell, why not six tablets from shenzen! they're almost the same thing as nexus 7!
just face it, nexus 7 isn't going to cut it.
surfaces biggest problem is marketing.. they should be marketing it to graphics folks who want that digitizer and full photoshop. not to moms&pops and shoving metro on their face.
Microsoft only do smear campaigns (Score:2)
surfaces biggest problem is marketing..
I think you need another quick look at those reviews
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these reviews will be read by guys and gals who already knew what the surface pro was 6 months ago. they're also written by same people.
they got a real clusterfuck going on about the whole what win8 means for you as an user, what windows Rt is and wtf this surface pro then is and why should they care about the pro since it's totally different piece of kit compared to the surface rt.
the only thing their adverts should have would be some talented guy using the digitizer like it's supposed to be used drawing u
Even Better. (Score:2, Insightful)
How does the Nexus perform running PhotoShop? What's its multitasking capabilties like? Does it support USB 3.0? Storage expansion options? Etc. Etc.
It multi-tasks great, In fact far better than the crippled Metro interface. In fact I have a large variety of photo editing programs suitable for quick editing on the move. I do design work on the 23" screen Desktop. With which I have networked to my Nexus, Which has available about 30GB and 100GB in the cloud,...again for about a sixth of the price, and has longer lasting battery, more portable, and has more mobile applications available for it, with a consistent popular (soon to be the most popular) OS.
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In other words the Nexus doesn't run PhotoShop. Does it even have a stylus that's worth a damn or is it limited to finger-painting like most capacitative screens?
As for Metro, I run Win 8 on my desktop and almost never use TIFKAM since I'm not using it in a mobile mode. You ARE aware that there is a full desktop GUI in Windows 8, aren't you (hint: it looks a lot like Windows 7)? There's even a command-line interface if you want it. Right now I've got a graphics package running, two document editors open,
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We're discussing the Surface Pro which runs the Win 8 Pro operating system on pretty capable x86 hardware with a Cintiq-class digitiser system built in, not the Surface RT which runs a cut-down OS on a non-x86 architecture with no pen digitiser. Do keep up at the back, there.
In context (Score:3)
What is this I don't even...
You realize that the Surface Pro doesn't run Windows RT?
...I think customers will be equally confused :)
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"fully functional and resourced PC in a tablet form factor"
That is exactly how I would describe the Nexus. Its not how I would describe the Surface [either of them]
sure, if you wan to use totally deceptive marketspeak. yeah, technically you can compile your android apps on nexus 7.
technically.
in practice though it's not so fully resourced pc.
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Im failing to see how... "Cortex A9" is remotely similar to "Core i5"
Well, they're both a word that starts with "Cor", a space, and then a single letter and a single digit. Really, if you can't see how similar they are, there's just no hope for you.
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Asus has shown how you would do a proper hybrid tablet/notebook solution. Mechanically they have nailed the ideal(to me) form factor with the Transformer tablet line. If they actually built something like that with specs similar to this MS thing then I would pay more than a thousand bucks for it.
I'm currently sitting in front of an i7 notebook with 8gigs of RAM. Imagining I could simply detach the screen while leaving the keybo
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Well the reviews have the kickstand as an ergonomic failure. It's a novel design but functionally, other convertible designs seem to do the job better - e.g. Asus Transformer, Dell Inspiron Duo, HP envy x2.
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It's a novel design but functionally, other convertible designs seem to do the job better - e.g. Asus Transformer, Dell Inspiron Duo, HP envy x2.
The Transformer makes a crappy laptop too. You just can't make a laptop work on your lap when all the heavy parts are behind the screen, unless you put a lot more weight in the keyboard dock. Even the extra battery Asus put in there for the Transformer isn't heavy enough to stop it wanting to tip over all the time.
Compromise (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't help thinking Microsoft still doesn't really get design. They talked a lot ahead of the launch of this device about the fact that their goal was a design without compromise - see this for example http://blogs.msdn.com/b/b8/archive/2011/08/31/designing-for-metro-style-and-the-desktop.aspx
But what the mean by no compromise is entirely different from what Apple means by no compromise. Apple designed the iPad to be the a compromise-free tablet - the best *tablet* they could come up with. And it was, and is a brilliant tablet. What it isn't is a laptop. Microsoft's idea of no compromise is a device that can be both a laptop and a tablet. What you end up with is an entirely compromised product - too heavy and power hungry to be any use as a tablet, it is also impossible to use on your lap making it an entirely rubbish laptop.
Every review I've seen says the same thing:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324900204578285963270503862.html?mod=djemptech_t
"It’s too hefty and costly and power-hungry to best the leading tablet, Apple’s full-size iPad. It is also too difficult to use in your lap."
http://www.engadget.com/2013/02/05/microsoft-surface-pro-review/
"When trying to be productive, we wished we had a proper laptop and, when relaxing on the couch, we wished we had a more finger-friendly desktop interface"
http://techland.time.com/2013/02/05/review-microsoft-surface-pro-the-surface-thats-more-pc-than-tablet/
"It’s bulkier than Surface RT because its components require more interior space. Microsoft’s stated battery life is five hours, compared to eight for Surface RT. Even the AC adapter is portlier."
Poor Mobile Strategy (Score:3)
I can't help thinking Microsoft still doesn't really get design.
Nothing to do with compromise. Its unashamedly, about using their Desktop [and Office] monopoly, to muscle there way onto mobile [smartphone and tablet] after failing have a compelling product to gain relevance in the new sector, by pretending they are an ecosystem(sic).
It hardly takes a genius to see that the a separation of both Tablet and Desktop for in both hardware and software, rather than some hybrid affair would be an improvement...but its not going to win against Android, or ironically ChromeOS.
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Anyone who says "no compromises" design is displaying a fundamental lack of understanding of what design is. Design IS compromise. EVERY design is trying to solve a problem -- but there's never just one problem. So you have a tablet OS and a traditional OS in the same package? Great. You also have more complexity than either alone and more disk space [microsoft.com] used. And more heat and worse battery life than a tablet, and lower performance than a dedicated laptop.
It's a red flag: if you hear a designer say "no comprom
Too expensive.... (Score:4, Interesting)
$1,100???? My daughter just got a Lenovo, about 3 lbs, 15" screen, delivered for $350. Why would I want to spend 3x the money for a smaller screen and a worse keyboard?
I can equip most of my family with nice laptops for the price of one Surface. :headscratch:
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I hate how deficient PC laptop screens are nowadays. They've somehow managed to get worse over time, not better. I'm still using an aging Dell laptop that's six years old because it has a 1920x1200 screen and I cannot even find a replacement that is similarly specced.
The only company that gets it is Apple, but their Retina display laptops start at $1,700, which is an absurd premium, and I'm not interested in running OS X anyway.
Footprint (Score:2)
And so... (Score:3)
It's a shitty laptop and a shitty tablet. Oh and 41-43Gb of OS gobbling up your SSD is simply a frigging joke.
Nothing new here..... move along.
should have more ram or at least at upgrade choice (Score:2)
should have more ram or at least at upgrade choice.
4GB is small now days.
Don't get it (Score:2)
Wacom tablet built in. Sort of. (Score:2)
Given that the lowest end (12WX) cintiq is around $900, and this seems to have much of the functionality of that, without the need to lug a laptop or desktop around as well, this suddenly becomes more interesting. I'd like to see more info about it's usability in that respect.
Apple loves you! (Score:2)
You should go get an iPad and a capacitive stylus. It's practically as good, with inexpensive apps that can do all your creating and editing just like a styles!
**BAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHHAH**
Yeah, I couldn't stop laughing at that either. It is, imho, the most massive failure of the iPad line not to have pressure sensitive, pixel accurate input from the company that made its mark wooing creative types. I've been hoping that the Surface Pro would be enough to take over the duties of both my tablet and my netbook-siz
Wait, people still use 3rd party "anti-virus?" (Score:2)
Haven't had anything but the MSSE loaded for, well, years. And I haven't bothered with real time monitoring of email since I moved to google apps and run from a dedicated chrome session. Am I shirking my responsibility by relying on the "cloud" and MS to do the checking for me? Well, yes, I am. And it's working exceptionally well. I'm sorry if I don't have a dozen scanners running in the background at all times. I do a point check with malwarebytes on occasion, but that's about it.
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Anti-virus is basically useless now, they don't update enough, virus writers test to make sure they can bypass them. How often do you see a machine with Symantec or McAfee installed completely pwned by viruses. Windows Defender (the built in av for windows 8) is probably enough as long as you surf smart.
Surface = Horse designed by committee... (Score:5, Insightful)
Ever hear that old joke that a camel is a horse designed by committee? Surface is the new horse. It's not quite a tablet, it's not quite a laptop, it's not quite...I don't know what the hell it is I just know I don't want one. It's too hot, it's too heavy, the battery life sucks (compared to an iPad anyhow), and it's way too expensive. If I wanted to run old Windows programs then why not just get a laptop at about half the price and not have to deal with the overheating issues? This thing is DOA.
trash (Score:3)
Ok, so basically the reviews are ripping it to shreds. Just re-read the last few sentences of the summary. That's the nice way of saying "This is total trash, stay away from it. I don't know who would want one, because either you need a tablet, or a notebook, and this one tries to be both and fails at both."
Re:Instead of the FUD... (Score:5, Interesting)
I've read the Anan review and it mentions pretty much everything that's in the summary. Though he puts a lot of positive spin on some things - the fans and the heat for example. He says you can hear the fans but it is not a problem. And proceeds to say the case hits 40 degrees but that it's not uncomfortable for it to be that hot. I have a hard time believing that.
I think the idea has some promise but a lot of problems in this current form.
Intel the Problem (Score:2)
I think the idea has some promise but a lot of problems in this current form.
Unfortunately ARM solves many of those hardware problems (apart from needing a flat surface), but then that would be that other unsuccessful product Windows launched recently...the one with RT in its name.
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And THAT is totally what I don't get. Why did MS not release a full windows for ARM?! They would do themselves a favor. I can totally see a laptop/netbook with ARM for light office work and web surfing. Why does it have to be IA? Do they have a contract with Intel?
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Because full Windows isn't meaningful if one can't run ancient old Windows programs --- this worked out so well for the Compaq TC1000.
Re:Intel the Problem (Score:5, Informative)
I haven't had to play with it, but our desktop support folks say that the XP virtualization in Windows 7 is fairly seamless. If they did something like that for an ARM version to have backwards compatibility I could see it working out. I don't know if that's even feasible though, since I assume hardware virtualization is a pretty big leap from OS virtualization.
Be careful to not confuse virtualization with emulation. To run x86 apps on ARM you'd need emulation which is an altogether different thing than virtualization. (at least in the common IT use of the terms) Unlike virtualization, emulation is very CPU-intensive so they'd be cutting the battery life of the RT down to at most that of the Pro while providing the user experience of a Pentium II. Their real mistake is taking their chance to start with a clean slate (ARM, RT) and slapping the Windows brand on. If they hadn't done that, every RT review wouldn't have an obligatory paragraph about how the thing runs "Windows" but it can't actually use any of the software you already have.
Re:Intel the Problem (Score:5, Informative)
If you want full Windows in a long-battery package, there are Atom chips for that which last over 8 hours.
Re:Instead of the FUD... (Score:5, Insightful)
True. However you don't want a 104F notebook sitting on your lap. It makes you sweat quite a bit and is uncomfortable. It absolutely won't burn your or anything like that. But it sucks to have a machine that warm on your lap.
Re:Instead of the FUD... (Score:4, Insightful)
True. However you don't want a 104F notebook sitting on your lap. It makes you sweat quite a bit and is uncomfortable. It absolutely won't burn your or anything like that. But it sucks to have a machine that warm on your lap.
And to generate all that heat requires current, which is why the batteries aren't lasting as long as they should for something like this.
Steve Jobs, for all his evils understood the concept of a complete package, get everything right (aside antennas, apparently) before rolling it out. This thing smacks of rushed to market.
Expect big sudden price drops.
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Say what you will about Apple devices (like the iPad), their devices don't run hot and they are silent or all but silent.
So why did Apple have those things right 5 years ago, but MSFT still can't do it?
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Say what you will about Apple devices (like the iPad), their devices don't run hot and they are silent or all but silent.
So why did Apple have those things right 5 years ago, but MSFT still can't do it?
Microsoft are scared to death that markets are abandoning them for mobile computing - i.e. tablets and smart phones, which is largely true. Dell and HP have seen sharp declines in demand for desktops and laptop computers. Most peopl never needed them, but got them because these devices allowed them to do some thing which were important to them, such as social networking, checking email, reading news, shopping, etc. Microsoft is very late to the dance and are trying to wedge themselves in the same way the
Re: Instead of the FUD... (Score:3, Informative)
Except the MacBook Air isn't a tablet. That's the point here. In the Surface Pro, you have a crappy tablet (I.e., laptop level heat) and a crappy laptop (tablet form factor, limited specs, floppy hinge that isn't, you know, actually lap friendly).
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I have my shower set to around 35. My wife bumps it up to around 40 but I think she is crazy.
And I'm a mammal. So I also give off heat. I prefer the objects that I allow to come into contact with my skin to be cooler than I am or at the most to come to the same temperature I am.
Re: (Score:3)
Re:Instead of the FUD... (Score:5, Interesting)
How is, "shorter battery life", "vents", "to warm to hold", "unstable on a lap" FUD? Look if you don't like iPads fine, don't like iPads. But don't go slamming the review for telling the truth. Microsoft creating this abortion of a device to try to marry two technologies, which are separate technologies. We can argue that iPads are too expensive and have other short comings. But there are plenty of Android tablets that can fill the gap. Heck an Asus is much better than this Microsoft device.
I see many parallels too (Score:5, Insightful)
I see many parallels too:
Apple: iPod/iPhone/iPad
Microsoft: Zune/Windows Phone/Surface
Yes indeed. Many parallels.
Re:Instead of the FUD... (Score:5, Funny)
TLDNR summary of Anandtech review:
As a tablet it, uh... has really good benchmark results... for a tablet. If you put up with all the heat, battery life and bulk issues it's awesome!
As a laptop it, uh... has really good benchmark results... for a tablet. If you put up with all the ergonomic problems and the crap touchpad, it's awesome!
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh give me a break, Dynabook? Is this Microsoft "marketing" in action? Yes Yes I know the term came somewhere else, but I am doing a jab. I happen to own a tablet (Android and iPad), smart phone (iPhone and Android), and computers (OSX and Linux). The reality of the matter is that the Surface Pro is NOT a device to get things done. It is not a device to program, unless you edit with a text editor, and don't want to compile and debug. I have gone through many of these iterations and the reality is that all o
Small screen, Needs Flat Surface (Score:2)
dead-end for anyone who wants to write, program or get real work done
I don't think anyone is getting their best work done, on a Surface...I'm not really sure why anyone would imply real work cannot be done on a Nexus.
Re:Small screen, Needs Flat Surface (Score:4, Funny)
Commas don't go, where you think they go.
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iPad looks like a good reader, film viewer and game console, but a dead-end for anyone who wants to write, program or get real work done.
For the main iPad use cases, you missed "web browser" and "email reader".
The addition of a Bluetooth keyboard (which are getting better and better) moves it squarely into the sweet spot for writing.
For "programming and real work" you can use the keyboard plus some of the increasingly excellent remoting software. While it's a compromise (so is a laptop for that matter) you can use the full power of a beefy desktop or server. With a decent network connection it works well.
I like laptops as well, but the point
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
You know, this argument that "you can't enter lots of text on an iPad with the on-screen keyboard, it's a toy," would be a lot more compelling if there weren't cheap & readily available bluetooth keyboards that will pair with the iPad and let you type to your heart's content.
Also, the argument that "real work" somehow requires lots of typing is more than a little silly. Not every job is programming. Not every job is writing nov
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Wow. That review was terrible. It also does nothing to refute the facts that the battery life sucks, it overheats, and it's a shitty tablet and a shitty laptop together. Please astroturf elsewhere
While that may have been astroturfing, as always Anandtech produced the most informative, data-filled review of a tech product. No other source ever, ever, ever comes close to Anandtech. It's absurd that Slashdot would ever mention a hardware review and skip Anandtech.
Re:Instead of the FUD... (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:3)
My big complaint with the review in the post is about how it fits in your lap.
In practice, the Surface RT and Surface Pro have a bigger footprint on my lap even than my old 15-inch MacBook Pro. And if I move a little, whomp, the screen drops off the back of my knees and folds out of sight.
It isn't a laptop and you aren't going to use it as a laptop. Sure, it has a keyboard, but if you're sitting on the couch with you feet up, you'd be using it in tablet mode. But, this is also why I don't think I'll have a laptop as my main "goof off" computer. I'm not going to post to Slashdot or Facebook or Twitter with a device that only has an on-screen keyboard (my phone has a physical keyboard for "heavier" text input). S
Re:Instead of the FUD... (Score:5, Insightful)
-it's got the battery life of a laptop
-it weighs as much as an ultrabook
-it doesn't have a proper keyboard
-you can't balance it on your lap
-it's too heavy to hold in one hand
-it's got a full blown wasteful Windows installation that eats greatly into the available disk space
-has cooling vents
To me that reads: all the drawbacks of both a laptop and a tablet
It propably is an amazing piece of kit and I honestly want something like that more than my next breath. But I would have preferred if they had gone the way Asus went with the Transformer line. Detachable clamshell keyboard with an extra battery. No need for a sleeve. Does not tip over as easily. All the benefits of a laptop and a tablet. Should have been a winner. Maybe the next batch.
Also I'm not quite sure about the choice of CPU.
I love the convergence of tablet and laptop. That is a truly, truly great thing. But normal laptop innards conveniently rearranged will not quite cut it. We are currently moving away from the old Intel x86 architecture and into happy RISC land for a reason. My Transformer has replaced my notebook for all but heavy typing and dev work. For everything else I actually prefer the plucky little bugger and take only that with me on business trips. No worries.
Re: (Score:2)
It propably is an amazing piece of kit and I honestly want something like that more than my next breath. But I would have preferred if they had gone the way Asus went with the Transformer line. Detachable clamshell keyboard with an extra battery.
Microsoft isn't the only one making these devices. There are other options available, and the Surface is just one of many. These hybrids sit on a continuum between tablet and laptop. Surface Pro is closer to the tablet side, while a device like the Samsung Ativ 700T is closer to the laptop side. If you want more laptop than tablet, go with one of them. If you're like me and want more tablet than laptop, the Surface is the better choice.
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Please show me the ultrabook that gets 10 hours of battery life. Hell show me the laptop with an intel (not atom) chip that gets 10 hours.
The only laptops I have seen that give that kind of life all have to use an extended battery that ruins their form factor and adds quite a bit of weight.
Re: Instead of the FUD... (Score:3)
Re:Instead of the FUD... (Score:4, Insightful)
It isn't a laptop and you aren't going to use it as a laptop.
But the fanboys keep saying 'hey, this is great, I can use it as a tablet and a laptop'.
Sure, it has a keyboard, but if you're sitting on the couch with you feet up, you'd be using it in tablet mode.
Unless you want to do actual work with it, as you would with a laptop.
But I'm not going to use the Surface keyboard cover as my keyboard because it doesn't provide the laptop clamshell footprint --- which works quite well.
So, uh, why buy one when there are much better tablets available for less?
Re:It's a laptop... (Score:5, Insightful)
No, it's a heavy, non-portable tablet with poor battery life and a requirement for virus checkers, rebooting after installation, frequent security updates, and a bizarre, unintuitive OS.
Re:It's a laptop... (Score:5, Insightful)
And it's main selling point it the fact that it's two inferior devices in one.
Re:It's a laptop... (Score:5, Funny)
My god, I just used "it's" instead of "its". Slashdot is indeed making me dumber, just as I had suspect.
Re: (Score:2)
My god, I just used "it's" instead of "its". Slashdot is indeed making me dumber, just as I had suspect.
Suspected.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
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A tablet with a screen that bests every single tablet out there in quality
Please elaborate. The "new" (I'm not sure what it's supposed to be called anymore) iPad and Nexus 10 beat it in PPI; the Transformer Infinity has slightly more vertical pixels and IPS+ mode that allows it to be used outdoors with ease. How does this best every single tablet out there?.
Re: (Score:2)
Why wouldn't you be doing serious work? More real work is done in that position than hunched over a desk.
In either case your right. Despite outdated notions here on slashdot. The iPad is better choice for all tablet use cases and most laptop use cases than the surface pro.
Re: (Score:2)
If you're sitting on a couch with your feet on a table, you're not doing any serious work, so why wouldn't you just use an iPad anyway while you're fapping to furry porn?
Just because it's called a laptop doesn't mean it's best to use it on your lap.
You can't watch furry porn on an iPad. No Flash, you see? Also this thing is to heavy to be used with one hand. So you might have to hire some help while you hold that thing with both hands.
MS obviously has designed this thing for heavily mutated deviants. Has Flash, but you will need three hands.
Re: (Score:2)
If you're sitting on a couch with your feet on a table, you're not doing any serious work, so why wouldn't you just use an iPad anyway while you're fapping to furry porn?
Just because it's called a laptop doesn't mean it's best to use it on your lap.
For other people like us it's not a common position. Most of my time is spent sitting at a desk or table with my laptop, a few times I've been seen with the said laptop on my lap on the couch. I want a device like this because it's a laptop that I can work on the majority of the time and still use it to moonlight as an tablet.
If you want a tablet just buy a tablet.
Re: (Score:2)
it's not that bad position for serious work..
the point is that an ipad doesn't magicaly stay upright on your laps when you have your feet on the table and neither does surface pro - but a laptop does and you're free to fap on your other hand while browsing the furry gallery with your other...
and fyi this applies to using it on train, in car..
Re: (Score:3)
The funny thing is, your list of "it'll run..." items is also true for Windows RT (Windows on ARM). Surface RT already has software to do all that, and it's not even a particularly cutting edge ARM chip. That said, since Atom has now managed to put itself in the same power-demand range as ARM, it is debatable whether the slightly increased price of the Intel chipset isn't worth the far greater library of available software.
I wouldn't be surprised to see Microsoft launch a "Surface Home" (or similarly named)