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Microsoft Surface Pro 3 review
Hands on: Microsoft Surface Pro 3 review
Can this laptop-tablet hybrid replace your laptop?
Our early verdict
"Microsoft says that this hybrid can replace your laptop, and it might
do the trick, but not without that optional Type Cover."
For
Sharper, larger screen
Improved Type Cover
Great stylus support
Against
Still quite pricey
Type Cover optional
Can run hot
In the case of Microsoft's Surface Pro 3,
the old adage just might turn out to be true: third time's a charm. The
new laptop-tablet hybrid has been billed as Microsoft's realization of
the vision it painted years ago: the ultimate, no-compromise device that
lets users consume and create content in equal measure.
The
result? After a few hours with the device, the Surface Pro 3 is pretty
dang close. Microsoft has improved upon its pro-grade tablet in almost
every way: a bigger, sharper screen, a thinner, lighter frame and the
snappiest keyboard cover yet among other upgrades. Even so, I'm still
somewhat suspect that such a device is even necessary.
I'm
still grappling with that question daily, regardless of what hybrid is
plopped on my lap. In the meantime, let's take a look at exactly what is
different just 9 months since the debut of the Microsoft Surface Pro 2. A light one-handed fit for a 12-incher
Bigger, thinner, lighter
We
have the technology. If you were to supercut Surface head Panos Panay's
presentation of the Surface Pro 3, it might sound like he was
introducing the Bionic Tablet. Sure, it might sound like the typical
tech event hyperbole, but the proof is in the hardware and the design
that Panay and his team have realized.
Sitting a Surface Pro 3 and
its predecessor side by side would immediately reveal some key
differences. For one, this tablet sports a 12-inch, 2160 x 1440 with
Microsoft's ClearType font smoothing technology. That makes for a 38%
bigger screen than the 10.6-inch Surface Pro 2 and 50% more pixels, by
Microsoft's measure. What
matters is that, likely thanks to ClearType, text looks super sharp –
even in Google Chrome. (The browser is notorious for its blurriness on
sharp Windows 8.1
displays.) Resting on my lap, I could point out nary a pixel on the QHD
display. And touch controls, like summoning the Charms menu, were a
breeze.
But anyone can pump out a sharper screen every year.
What's more marvelous about the Surface Pro 3 is that it managed to come
in both thinner and lighter than the previous model while increasing in
diagonal width. At just 1.76 pounds and 0.36 inches thin, that's no
small feat, considering last year's model weighed 1.98 pounds and
measured 0.53 inches. Those vents line the entire 'top' half of the tabletMicrosoft
chalks this up to a new thermal design (and over 100 custom parts)
that, while fan-cooled, dispenses heat through vents that span nearly
half of the device's edges. (Though, I found the back of the slate to
run rather hot while installing updates.) Plus, nothing in this device
is modular or upgradable, like most tablets and even Ultrabooks.
A smarter cover
Just
like the hardware itself, Microsoft went back to the drawing board with
its Type Cover accessory. Now, the cover sports a second point of
articulation with a magnet inside that sticks it to the tablet's lower
bezel. Utilizing this sets the keys and clickpad at an angle, which made
for a much more comfortable typing experience both on the desk in the
TechRadar office and my lap while at the Surface 3 Pro press event in
New York. Nowhere near as sturdy as a laptop, but a leap in the right directionBrightly
backlit and snappier than ever, the Surface Pro 3 Type Cover is already
the company's best yet. With a more membrane key-like approach this
time, there's deeper travel and punchier rebound in each key, making for
an experience quite close to that of a laptop. And that smooth plastic
clickpad hasn't just increased in width; it produced smoother tracking
and better multi-touch support than I've had with the Pro 2.
Now,
here's the catch: the thing will set you back an additional $129 (about
£76, AU$139). And to aspire to Microsoft's catch phrase, "the tablet
that can replace your laptop," this accessory is essential. It makes you
wonder why the Type Cover is optional at all – including it with the
entry-level Surface Pro 3 would still have it come in under the 64GB
Surface Pro 2.
A pen packing the power of Bluetooth
Well,
that and the "thinnest optical stack" in the screen industry, as
Microsoft puts it. (Not to mention that improved kickstand with an even
wider viewing angle.) With every Surface Pro 3 comes the Surface Pen, a
total revision of the stylus found alongside the previous Surface Pro
models. This time, the stylus is weighted to feel more like an actual
writing instrument.
Plus, the LCD screen has been brought closer
to the glass than ever, to reduce the disconnect between where the
stylus touches and the actual input. Microsoft calls this the parallax
effect, but what you need to know is that writing feels more natural –
plain and simple. The screen and stylus handle my terrible cursive surprisingly wellThe
Surface Pen also uses the tablet's Bluetooth connection to great
effect. Click the button atop the stylus, and the Surface Pro 3 unlocks
automatically and starts OneNote with your last page ready for more
notes. Double-clicking the pen's top button takes a screenshot of
whatever is on the screen.
Finally, Microsoft improved greatly on
its touchscreen palm rejection, what it calls Palm Block. The result is
fewer mishaps in my brief time with the device, and thus an even more
natural feel.
Is the price right?
Microsoft managed to
price the Surface Pro 3 at $799 (around £474, AU$863) to start. That's
with an Intel Core i3 processor, 4GB of memory and 64GB of storage. (The
Surface Pro 2 still starts at $899, but likely not for long.) But
really, considering how vital the Type Cover is to the overall
experience and Microsoft's initial promise, this latest tablet may as
well cost $929. This is as far back as the hinge goes, and it's plentyHowever,
what Panay didn't mention on stage – and told me after the fact – is
that just the Core i5 option will be available for pre-order starting
tomorrow and general sale June 20. And that starts at $999 (about £593,
AU$1,079) without the Type Cover. Orders for the entry-level and $1,549
(around £919, AU$1,673), Core i7-packing version won't be fulfilled
until late August.
Early verdict
The Surface Pro 3 brings
Microsoft dangerously close to its vision of "replacing the laptop,"
with vastly improved hardware inside and out. Save for a bit of a dearth
of hard connections – just one USB 3.0, microSD and a mini DisplayPort
here – I doubt I'll be left wanting for much as get more familiar with
this device for a full review.
The driving idea behind the
Surface Pro 3 is putting the full weight of Microsoft's software and
hardware chops behind a single device. And features like this Surface
Pen and OneNote instill confidence that the company is doing good by
that vision.
Price and barely optional accessories aside, I'm
already bullish on what this hybrid device is capable of. And I've been
skeptical bordering on critical of the category since it popped up a few
years back. Check back soon for my full review to see whether the
Surface Pro 3 lives up to its charms.
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