Thursday, November 5, 2015

Microsoft Surface Book

Microsoft Surface Book
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Here's something you don't see every day--Microsoft making a laptop. Sure, they've made the OS that powers most personal computers since the beginning, but they've left hardware to their partners. Of course, this isn't so different from Microsoft making a tablet that could also be your computer--Surface Pro. But it is different. Powerful Windows tablets are wonderful products, but they're still anything but mainstream. Laptops power much of the world, and despite rumors of the post-PC era, that doesn't seem like it's changing soon. But just in case, Microsoft has you covered since the Surface Book is a laptop that acts and feels like a laptop, but can separate into two pieces, leaving you with a 13.5" tablet that weighs 1.6 pounds.
While Surface Pro 4 is a tablet first and a laptop second, the 3.34 lb with battery such as dell Precision M70 battery, dell Precision M90 battery, dell Studio 17 battery, dell Studio 1745 battery, dell N855P battery, dell Studio 1749 battery, dell Vostro 1200 battery, dell RM628 battery, dell Vostro 1310 battery, dell Vostro 1510 battery, dell T116C battery, dell Vostro 1400 battery. Surface Book is a laptop first and foremost. There are no compromises in keyboard, trackpad or computing power here. In fact, it's a very powerful Ultrabook, though it's not the supercomputer Microsoft would have you believe when they first showed it off in their launch event. As an undocked tablet (or clipboard as Microsoft calls it) it lacks the ports of Surface Pro 4 (we're talking only about the tablet portion). It has only a 3.5mm audio jack and charging port, so you won't be able to use USB devices or external wired displays with the tablet portion unless you buy Microsoft's $199 Surface Dock. The base of course, has a typical selection of 13" laptop ports.
Surface Book is the dream machine of Ultrabooks with a price tag to match. The base model is $1,500 and that doesn't even include the dedicated graphics that (in some graphics benchmarks and games only) make it twice as fast as the 13" Retina MacBook Pro. That was a lofty claim on Microsoft's part. The model we look at sells for $2,100 and it has a 6th generation Intel Skylake dual core i7 CPU, 8 gigs of RAM, a fast NVMe PCIe 256 gig SSD and NVIDIA dedicated graphics switchable with Intel HD 520 integrated graphics. There are even more expensive models if you opt for a bigger SSD and 16 gigs of RAM, and the most expensive model is an insane $3,000 (16 gigs RAM, 1 TB SSD). The machine has an absolutely lovely 3000 x 2000 PixelSense IPS display with multi-touch and an active digitizer that works with the included N-Trig pen. Now that Windows 10 and Adobe CC programs have ironed out many of the problems with Windows display scaling, I can say I absolutely enjoy the high resolution panel for photo and video editing. Dual band WiFi 802.11ac (Marvell Avastar), Bluetooth 4.0, a front 5MP camera that supports Windows Hello facial recognition for login and a rear 8MP camera with 1080p video recording round out the features.
Note that since the NVIDIA dedicated GPU is in the base, you can in theory turn any Surface Book into the dedicated graphics model, but the challenge would be finding the base for sale separately. The dGPU requires a higher wattage power supply, so Microsoft actually ships different chargers with the integrated and dedicated graphics models.

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