The Weirdest Mainstream Laptop
You Can Buy
It's not a tablet, despite its looks. But it is a gorgeous,
impressively powerful, and very very small Windows 8 laptop--one of the best on
the market.
The Microsoft Surface Pro is easily the most interesting laptop to cross my
desk in the past few years. Not the best, but certainly the ballista and most
unusual. And it is a laptop; this isn't a tablet, like its confusing sibling,
the Surface RT, which looks nearly identical and was released late last year
for half the price of this one. Instead it's an experimental ultra portable,
like Lenovo's
Yoga 13 (our favorite early Windows 8 laptop), which innovates with form
and aesthetics while remaining, distinctly, a laptop.
What's Good
The size, shape, and build quality are all great. This is a tiny laptop,
with a mere 10-inch screen, weighing in at only two pounds. The smallest
laptops on the market with this kind of power are 11 inches, and even those are
rare--12- and 13-inch laptops tend to be the small ones, and those usually
weight at least 25 percent more than the Surface Pro. Though it looks more like
an iPad than anything else, it's not a tablet in that sense--it doesn't use a
mobile operating system like the iPad, and so in fact, it's a Mac Book Air
competitor, though it's significantly smaller. It's a smooth, angled tablet
onto which you can magnetically attach one of several covers (two of which have
keyboards on them). There's a kickstand on the back that flips out solidly and
securely to rest the screen on a table. When you attach a cover, flip out the
kickstand, and sit the Surface Pro down on a table, it looks like a laptop. A
laptop with a weird giant flip-out kickstand and a super-thin detachable
keyboard. Then you can fold it all up and it looks like a tablet. A tablet with
a USB port and a Core i5 processor and the ability to run any Windows program.
The screen is fantastic--not quite as sharp as a retina display on a Mac
Book Pro, but remember that this machine starts at $900, and the cheapest
retina Mac Book starts at $1,700. And that's no knock against the screen,
either; it's incredibly sharp and vibrant, and the bold, colorful Windows 8 interface
looks awesome on it. As a touch screen, it's definitely the most responsive of
any Windows 8 devices I've tried--the Yoga 13 sometimes missed gestures,
especially the swipe-from-the-side gesture that brings up a few settings, and
the Surface Pro never suffered that problem.
It has minimal ports, but I didn't find that a problem--if you're buying
what's probably the smallest and most portable full-figured computer out there,
you can't expect it to have six USB ports and five ways to output video. There's
a magnetic power jack that shamelessly rips off Apple's design,
a Mini Display Port
for connecting to an external display, one USB 3.0 port, and both front- and
rear-facing webcams. I found the ports sort of tight when trying to plug in
accessories, but I suppose that means they're secure.
On the bottom edge of the Surface Pro is a very strong little magnet so you
can clip on a cover. Microsoft gave me two, the Type Cover and the Touch Cover,
and within just a few minutes it was clear which is the better accessory. The
Type Cover is a real keyboard--it has regular keys, just like on any other
keyboard. The Touch Cover, which is the one Microsoft has been advertising more
heavily, is something very different--it's just a piece of fabric with raised
sections for the "keys." There's no actual "typing" to be
done on the Touch Cover--you just tap the fabric.
The Type Cover stayed on my Surface during almost the entire testing period.
It's about the same size as the touch cover, but provides an actual keyboard
with actual keys that move up and down as you press them. It's small, but I had
no problem at all jumping in and typing long posts on it, including this
one--it has full-sized backspace and shift keys, arrow keys, setting controls
on the top bar (play/pause, search, home, volume), and even a little track pad.
The track pad is cramped, and for any serious computing you'll want a real
mouse, but in a pinch I was impressed with how well it worked. The Type Cover
as a whole is fantastic, much better than the more publicized Touch Cover.
I still have mixed feelings about Windows 8's schizophrenic tablet/laptop
dueling interfaces, but there's no denying it has potential. Here's what that
means, in a nutshell: Windows 8 has two distinct interfaces, one designed for
touch and one designed for keyboard/mouse. You can think of them as
"tablet mode" and "laptop mode." Tablet mode needs entirely
new apps, while laptop mode uses any of the bazillion bits of software already
available for the bazillions of older Windows computers. The (few) Windows
8-specific apps are often lovely, especially the video apps like Netflix and
Hulu Plus. And because this is a real x86 laptop, you can run any old Windows
software, reaching back decades. I called up my old Windows friends
instantly--Pidgin, VLC, Chrome, Photoshop, Tweet deck--and they all work just
fine.
Battery life was just fine--I was getting
about six hours of heavy use before having to recharge, which is on par with
other ultra portables.
And I think the price is totally fair. You get more for your money with the
Surface Pro than the Mac Book Air, including double the storage (128GB vs. 64GB
at the $1,000 price point) and a nicer display, plus a flashier interface and a
smaller physical footprint.
What's Bad
The tablet-plus-detachable-keyboard design is definitely novel, but I'm not
convinced it's a better solution than a convertible (aka a screen that flips
around) like the Lenovo Yoga 13. For one thing, it's near-impossible to use it
on your lap; the kickstand is really only capable on a hard, flat surface,
which my crotch is not. Also, the screen's angle isn't adjustable. The angle
isn't awful but I found myself wanting to tilt it backwards more than
once. I never quite found the use case that really had me thinking "oh, that's
why it makes sense to have a detachable keyboard," partly because I was
never really without the Type Cover--it was protecting the Surface, after all!
The Type Cover, while surprisingly good, is still not as good as a real
keyboard would have been. And the Touch Cover, the touch-only fabric keyboard
cover Microsoft's been advertising the hell out of, didn't do it for me at all.
It has no travel at all--it's just a piece of fabric, so the keys don't move
when you type on them. Bend down and tap your fingers on a short dense carpet.
That's what it feels like. Not good! With practice it would probably be faster
than an on-screen keyboard--it has some very fancy tech in it, like sensors
that can tell if you're "typing" or just resting your hands on the
keys, and of course you don't have to worry about a virtual touch-keyboard
taking up half your screen space, but I did not find it to be a particularly
good typing solution. I made frequent mistakes with it and never really found
my rhythm to get comfortable with it. Microsoft spent years in R&D on this
thing and I can't imagine why. Forget the Touch Cover. The Type Cover is great,
get that.
My review unit came with a Wedge Mouse, a tiny half-sized mouse that's kind
of like a regular-sized mouse that's been chopped in half so it's only about an
inch longer than its buttons. Microsoft actually makes some of the best mice
out there, but, um, this one's a miss. It's uncomfortable to grip and the
scrolling is jerky and unreliable. Skip it.
(The stylus, on the other hand, is pretty nice. Cheaply made, but very
effective and accurate, and doesn't require any external power.)
The screen size and keyboard size is going to be an issue for some people.
It's very, very small, which is great for portability but not so hot when
you're trying to get a bunch of work done. Specs-wise, the Surface Pro is
powerful, thanks to the Core i5 processor and quick SSD drive, but the tiny
screen definitely hurt my ability to multitask. I worked for two full days on
the Surface Pro, and my work day is demanding for any computer--I always have
at least 15 tabs open in my web browser, editing, writing, doing light photo
and video editing, using several chat rooms and IM programs, listening to
music, constantly monitoring Tweet Deck--and I found, power-wise, that the
Surface Pro was capable. But doing all that on a 10-inch screen, with a
minuscule track pad, was much more difficult than on my typical 13-inch
machine.
Windows 8 has also its issues. I went into them more deeply on the Lenovo
Yoga 13 review, and things haven't changed since then, so it still has a
distinct lack of new apps and a definite sense of confusion. Which app do I
use, the touch version of Internet Explorer or the desktop version? Do I
download an app for instant messaging or just use something like Pidgin, an old
Windows app?
And the touch apps are limited in number as well as quality; the Twitter
apps are awful, for example, and it's lacking Facebook, Spotify, Rdio,
Simplenote, Instapaper, most photo sharing apps (Flickr, Snapchat, Vine)...the
list goes on. Microsoft hasn't had much success getting top-quality apps to
Windows Phone, so hopefully they make a major push for Windows 8.
But what was almost more interesting about the Surface Pro is that during my
workday, I completely ignored all of the new fancy apps and interface. To
really get work done, I stuck in "desktop" mode, which is where all
the traditional apps are, and barely felt like I was using Windows 8 at all. I
hardly ever used the new apps, even the good ones--sure, the Netflix app is
nice, but I can just go to Netflix.com and use a real keyboard for searching
and a real mouse for navigating. Sure, Metro Twit, the most popular Windows 8
Twitter app, is beautiful, but it's also functionally sparse compared to the old
Windows version of Tweet Deck. I'm just not seeing a compelling reason to use
the new apps.
And that's kind of a problem, too--I immediately ran into all of the old
Windows issues ("why do I have to install the .net 2.0 framework? What the
hell even is that? Why did the Surface freak out and crash when I connected an
external monitor?" etc.) that any old Windows 7 PC has. The new apps are
pretty, but when you give me the significant power of an Intel Core i5
processor, why would I use software that's designed specifically so it's easy
to run on low-powered hardware?
The Price
Starting at $900, which is reasonable, considering the size advantages and
impressive build quality of the device. That one comes with 64GB of solid-state
storage, but if you've decided on a Surface Pro, I'd recommend making the jump
to the 128GB model, which'll cost an extra $100. The operating system takes up
a lot of room, so you want all the space you can get.
The Verdict
I like the Surface Pro a lot! I have a ton of admiration for Microsoft for
really putting themselves out there and making a weird little product that
mostly delivers on its promises. The build quality is amazing--this is the
first laptop I've tested that really feels as unique and premium as the Mac
Book Air. And the thing is very powerful and capable.
But the tiny screen size, lack of apps, and general sense of confusion
around Windows 8 makes me hesitate in recommending it over the Air, which I
would consider the best ultra portable on the market. After a day of work, I
just found the Air to be a more comfortable computing experience--fewer error
messages, a more spacious and feature-filled keyboard and track pad, a clearer
vision as regards software. The Surface Pro is cool as hell, but if you gave me
a thousand dollars and had me buy a laptop? I'd get the Air.
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