Tech Advisor

Microsoft Surface Pro

£2,149 inc VAT from fave.co/2tMPosC

- Mark Hachman

Set Microsoft’s Surface Pro (2017) next to its predecesso­r, the Surface Pro 4, and we defy you to tell the difference. With the same dimensions and weight, the two are virtually indistingu­ishable – a kickstand that reclines further and a few cosmetic changes are all that separate them. What sells the new Surface Pro, though, is on the inside: a dramatic upgrade to the processor and graphics that propels it to the head of the 2-in-1 class.

Microsoft built the Surface Pro around a new 7thgenerat­ion Kaby Lake processor and its associated Iris Plus integrated graphics, and boy, do they shine. Especially in graphics, the new Surface Pro (2017) almost doubles the performanc­e of the two-year-

old Surface Pro 4, and challenges notebooks like the original Surface Book and 15in HP Spectre x360, both of which use a dedicated graphics chip.

Microsoft demands a hefty premium for that kind of performanc­e, though. Not only is the fancy Alcantarab­ound Signature Type Cover sold separately (£124 from fave.co/2rkoB8V), but the more sensitive Surface Pen is as well (£99 from fave.co/2rkBIqM). Add that to the whopping £2,149 that Microsoft asks for our review model, and you have to ask yourself, do we really want a Surface tablet, or could we save upwards of £700 buying a slightly heavier notebook?

Subtle changes

Because the new Surface Pro is so nearly identical to the Surface Pro 4, most difference­s are trivial: The front-facing camera now fades into the tablet bezel, for example, and the Surface Pro features a softer, rounded profile. (We only noticed these difference­s after Microsoft pointed them out, and we bet most users simply won’t be aware of them.) The Surface Pro is also the first of Microsoft’s Surface products to ship with the Windows 10 Creators Update.

The Signature Type Covers are pleasingly fuzzy, though the fabric tends to compress a bit, especially on the bottom, and collect dust. The colour options are nice: platinum, burgundy and cobalt blue, as well as the standard black. The new Surface Pens ship in the same colours.

The specificat­ions should sound familiar. The new Surface Pro measures 292.1x201.42x8.5mm, the same as the Surface Pro 4, and weighs between 766- and

786g. Our callipers found the Surface Pro 4 to be 8.45mm thin, versus 8.5mm for the Surface Pro.

As tested, our version – with a 2.5GHz Core i7-7660, 16GB of RAM and 512GB of speedy NVMe storage – weighed 786g for the tablet alone, and 1,058g with the Signature Type Cover keyboard. That’s the same weight and dimensions as the Surface Pro 4 (£635 from fave.co/2rkruqb), already one of the lightest Windows tablets on the market.

Likewise, the screens are identical: a 12.3in PixelSense display, with a resolution of 2,736x1,824 (267ppi). Here’s one difference: the Surface Pro includes an ‘enhanced’ colour profile, like the Surface Studio, versus the standard sRGB colour display. Under Enhanced mode, the colours pop a bit more, while in sRGB they appear a bit more washed-out. (The Surface Studio includes a ‘Vivid’ colour mode, which Microsoft

says is different than the ‘Enhanced’ mode. “It takes the mid-tones as close to P3-D65 colour gamut as possible while leaving skin tones as is,” according to a spokeswoma­n.)

Internal difference­s are slight as well. Both tablets contain 802.11ac, along with Bluetooth 4.0 for the SP4 and Bluetooth 4.1 for the new Surface Pro. The benefits of the upgraded Bluetooth will become more apparent once Microsoft releases the planned Surface Pro with LTE variant later this year, as Bluetooth 4.1 signals don’t interfere with LTE.

The cameras of both the new Surface Pro and the older Surface Pro 4 appear identical (5Mp on the front, 8Mp on the rear), and an appropriat­e resolution for the form factor. The SP4’s rear-facing camera delivered richer colour, however, and camera fans should consider the 13Mp camera within the Samsung Galaxy Book instead. Most importantl­y, the Surface Pro’s front-facing camera is Windows Hello-enabled and lightning-quick, thanks in part to a second frontfacin­g sensor that isn’t present on the Surface Pro 4.

Fortunatel­y, Microsoft sticks with the traditiona­l Surface I/O complement: the Surface connector, a mini-DisplayPor­t connector, and a full-sized USB-A connector. A microSD card slot hides under the kickstand, as before. The Surface connector allows Surface owners to attach peripheral­s that they’ve already owned, like the standalone Surface Dock and charger. We think that’s a smart decision, whereas the Samsung Galaxy Book’s wholesale commitment to USB-C is a mistake. In any event, you know what you’re buying when you purchase a Surface.

A mini-Surface Studio

Externally, the key difference between the two Microsoft tablets is that the new Surface Pro kickstand now folds back to 15 degrees off the horizontal, what Microsoft calls ‘Studio mode’. This refers to Microsoft’s Surface Studio, the massive all-in-one desktop whose touch display also dramatical­ly reclines to just a slight angle. If you own a Surface Dial, the new Surface Pro also allows you to use the device directly on the screen, something that had previously been reserved just for the Surface Studio.

Both the increased keyboard pitch and the Surface Dial integratio­n are designed with inking in mind, either using the existing Surface Pen or the upgraded model. We didn’t notice the Dial slide down the screen as it does on the Studio, though it simply takes up

a bit too much real estate to be as useful as it is on Microsoft’s massive all-in-one.

Though Microsoft upgraded its Surface Pen to increase the levels of pressure to 4,096, it did so by making the Pen slightly less useful. The new Pen does away with the pen clip. Instead, Microsoft depends on the magnetic strip on the side of the Pen to secure it, which simply proves impractica­l over time. We still wish there were a pen loop.

Otherwise, the upgraded Pen still uses a AAAA battery with a one-year lifespan. Just as importantl­y, it retained its ability to ‘erase’ digital ink, a feature not every stylus includes. It inks just as well as the original Pen and comes with ‘tilt’ support as well, generating a broader ink stroke. Microsoft’s new Pen also reduces inking latency to 21ms. That was impossible for us to confirm, but digital ink flows off the Pen without any noticeable lag – more important as Microsoft makes pen navigation a more integral part of Windows.

Other than the fabric, we can’t discern any major difference between the Surface Pro 4’s keyboard and that of the new Surface Pro. (For some reason, however, Microsoft did away with the Insert key.) We preferred the Surface Pro 3 keyboard, and the way in which my fingers simply glided over the keys. But neither the keyboard nor the new Surface Pro’s trackpad hide any flaws, and they’re both efficient and comfortabl­e to type upon for long periods of time.

Performanc­e: Blazing fast, but at a price

Here’s one of the most impressive features of the new Surface Pro: from a graphics perspectiv­e, it offers the

performanc­e of the original Surface Book, together with its custom, discrete-GPU base. It vastly outperform­s the two-year-old Surface Pro 4 – though with a few caveats.

For one thing, our older Surface Pro 4 used a Core i5, rather than a top-of-the-line Core i7. And the performanc­e increases, as impressive as they are, are largely confined to graphics-intensive applicatio­ns. In the generic PCMark 8 Work benchmark, for example, we noted just a 10 percent improvemen­t over the Surface Pro 4. From a performanc­e standpoint, then, upgrading from the Surface Pro 4 to the Surface Pro makes sense only if you plan to use the Surface Pro for games, image rendering or similar tasks.

Still, the Surface Pro isn’t a machine that just checks the boxes, using components with minimal performanc­e in the service of simply filling out a spec sheet. Looking back over our database of tested products, for example, its internal Samsung KUS040202M-B000 NVMe provides among the fastest read speeds we’ve tested: 1,702MB/s, according to the CrystalMar­k 5.0.3 benchmark.

The new Surface Pro’s performanc­e, though, comes at a significan­t price. According to our testing, the Surface Pro 4 doesn’t suffer any thermal degradatio­n – the tablet runs at the same performanc­e level throughout. While testing the new Surface Pro under

prolonged load (such as a looped benchmark or game) its fan turns on and the tablet will clock down, reducing performanc­e in 3DMark, for example, by about 24 percent to over 33 percent. The rear of our tablet, near the top, also gets quite hot. Microsoft told us that it only expected a drop of about 20 percent or so, and advised us that we may have a defective device.

In the following graphs, we’ve compared the new Surface Pro (2017) to several Windows tablets, ultrabooks, and laptops, with a range of processors and graphics options.

We always run the PCMark suite of benchmarks, which measure two different workloads: Home and

Creative. Both include web browsing and light gaming. The upshot here is as the workloads become more graphics-intensive, the Surface Pro’s value increases.

From there, we move on to measuring more specific tasks. Maxon’s Cinebench measures how well a processor and graphics chip render scenes, and we use it to push the Core i7-7660U’s two cores and four threads to their ultimate. Again, the Surface Pro 2017 performs surprising­ly well. You can’t consider the Surface Pro to be a gaming laptop by any stretch, but the Dell Inspiron 15 7000 (not included), a Core i5 notebook with a GTX 1050 Ti GPU, reports a Cinebench score of 478.

We also test how the processor fares over time using the Handbrake benchmark, which transcodes a major Hollywood film from a MKV format into something that could be watched on a plane. Again, the Surface Pro is at the top of the heap.

Benchmarks are benchmarks, though. Don’t expect to be able to play the latest Battlefiel­d game at its highest detailed settings. We’re fans of playing older single-player games on the cheap, though, and games like the original Tomb Raider reboot topped 42 frames per second (fps) on 1080p/High settings. Batman: Arkham City also generated 48fps on 1080p settings, with even better frame rates when you dialled down the

resolution a bit. Our only concern is how the thermals would hold up over prolonged gameplay.

Of all the surprises that the Surface Pro (2017) offered, one of the most interestin­g was in battery life. Given that the dimensions of the new Surface Pro left little, if any, room for additional battery cells, it still surprised me that its 45Whr battery ran down over the course of eight hours, substantia­lly more than the Surface Pro 4.

Still, that’s way short of the 13.5 hours Microsoft promised, even though we both test using video rundowns that loop video until the machine dies. (If it matters, Microsoft used a Core i5 in its tests, not the Core i7 machine we tested. Difference­s in screen brightness could also help explain the discrepanc­ies, as well as the possibilit­y that Microsoft inadverten­tly loaned us a defective machine.) Verdict On balance Microsoft has crafted a winning Windows tablet. The new Surface Pro is pricey, though a £979 Core i5 version Microsoft sells may be far more affordable. The Surface Pro absolutely excels under short use, though performanc­e tends to suffer when the fan kicks in. Though the battery life falls short of the 13.5 hours Microsoft promises, it’s still better than the older Surface Pro 4.

We thought about whether the new Surface Pro (2017) deserved a full four stars, and finally decided against it. True, other tablets lack the Surface Dial integratio­n and don’t lean back quite so far. That, for us, doesn’t change the game. Microsoft has simply

made an improved Surface Pro 4 for Surface Pro 4 fans. Meanwhile, through each successive generation, competitio­n has grown more intense. That’s fine – Microsoft intended to break trail with its Surface devices, but always acknowledg­ed that it was leading other hardware makers into the market.

It’s possible that Microsoft may offer incrementa­l improvemen­ts to its tablets going forward. That’s left a window of opportunit­y to the competitio­n. We endorsed the leap into the Surface Pro 3, and still believe that the Pro 4 represents Microsoft’s best Windows tablet. At the time, however, we wondered whether the others would catch up. They have. We still recommend the new Surface Pro (2017), but you should also check out the competitio­n.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia