Tech Advisor

Microsoft Surface Pro 7

Price: £1,449 (inc VAT) from fave.co/2PbZKPN

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Microsoft’s Surface Pro 7, the latest in the company’s excellent Surface Pro series, continues the tradition of being a durable, dependable tablet for the ages. It’s measurably better this time around, too, with an internal upgrade to Intel’s 10th-gen, 10nm Ice Lake chip and a nod to the future, a USB-C port. There are many good reasons why we love the Surface Pro 7.

Granted, it’s a lot easier to be the best game in town when rival Windows tablets are few and far between. At this point, the field consists largely of Microsoft’s Surface Pro models, the Surface Pro X (£999 from fave.co/2vpqq7L), Lenovo’s ThinkPad X1 Tablet (£1,559 from fave.co/37t2pKx), monstrous tablet workstatio­ns like the HP Zbook X2 (£2,504 from fave.co/38nSnvt), and our long-standing favourite, the Lenovo IdeaPad Miix 520 (£799 from fave.co/2Sn1CpR). There’s a definite gap between these and £300-ish Atom-powered tablets from names like RCA and iView, which we wouldn’t necessaril­y recommend. If you’re looking for a full-fledged computer that’s extremely portable and can even work as a tablet, the Surface Pro 7 is your best choice.

Hardware and specs

The Surface Pro 7 is a full-fledged PC made superporta­ble. You won’t get discrete graphics, but you will get CPU choices up to a Core i7, and generous RAM and storage options. Here are the full specs:

The Microsoft Surface Pro 7 offers the same tablet experience as in years past: prop it up with its iconic kickstand, connect the ‘optional’ Surface Signature Keyboard (that you’ll want unless you’re seriously tablet-centric), and get to work. A Surface Pen, as always, is optional. Though it’s among the most portable of Microsoft’s Surface offerings, the tablet isn’t quite the mobile-forward design that you might have

hoped – that’s left to the Surface Pro X, though that tablet ships with its own set of issues.

Our Surface Pro 7 test unit shares an Intel Core Ice Lake processor with the Surface Laptop 3 for Business (£1,949 from fave.co/2SqXQfr), a substantia­l improvemen­t in processing power from the prior generation. Traditiona­lly, this has been what’s separated one Surface Pro from its predecesso­r.

Versus a modern laptop or Android tablet, the Surface Pro 7’s bezels are relatively enormous: about a half-inch along the left and right bezel of the device, and slightly less along the top and bottom. They’re a necessary evil for enjoying the Surface Pro 7 as an

actual tablet, and holding it by its edges. Still, the large, chunky bezels give it a rather dated look.

The built-in, glossy 2,736x1,824 display remains unchanged from previous models, slightly less than the true 3,000x2,000 resolution of, say, the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Tablet (3rd Gen). Microsoft hasn’t moved to OLED technology yet, unfortunat­ely. The 396 nits of brightness that the display puts out is in line with that of previous Surface tablets, and not too far out of line with rival notebooks and tablets. It’s still not bright enough for working in full sunlight, though, especially as the glossy display is very reflective. Inside my somewhat dim basement office, though, the Surface Pro 7 was a pleasure to work upon.

By the way, while Microsoft claims that users may be able to open the Surface Laptop 3 and upgrade the SSD, the Surface Pro 7 is decidedly sealed.

A solid keyboard and typing experience

As always, if you do buy the Surface Pro 7, be sure and budget for a Surface Pro Signature Type Cover, £149 from fave.co/37pPrge. Unofficial­ly, you have cheaper alternativ­es: if you can track down the Surface Type Cover for the Surface Pro 3 (with a pen loop) or the Surface 3 Type Cover, they’d both work – I attached each in turn to the Surface Pro 7 and wrote a couple of paragraphs in this review. They rattle a bit, and the layout is slightly different compared to the more modern Signature Type Covers that begin with the Surface Pro 4. But they cost a lot less.

The older Type Covers feature larger keys, though with less key travel and resistance. In some ways,

I prefer the older Type Covers, as there’s a happy medium between the need to depress the keys and the desire to glide over them quickly. Over succeeding generation­s, the Type Cover’s individual keys have shrunk, giving more room to the trackpad. Like any keyboard, however, the feel is subject to individual interpreta­tion. The Type Cover also protects the Surface Pro’s display. The more modern Type Covers feel a bit stiffer and more sturdy, suggesting they might shelter the screen even more. They also offer three levels of backlighti­ng, or no lighting at all.

We were sent the Charcoal Signature Type Cover to accompany the Surface Pro 7. Other colour options

include Poppy Red and Ice Blue. All three are coated in the soft, yet durable Alcantara fabric, which seems a bit less furry than in generation­s past.

As you might expect, the Type Cover includes a Microsoft Precision Touchpad, which easily processes taps and other gestures. It’s clickable over its entire surface, though it requires a bit more effort near the top. At this point, Microsoft has done a surprising­ly good job of nailing the inking experience. You’ll have to buy a Surface Pen, sure. But setup is a breeze, with a quick walkthroug­h via the Surface app. A click of the rubber eraser and the Surface Pro 7 launches the Whiteboard app – not my first choice for drawing, but

a real pleasure to use neverthele­ss. Digital ink flows smoothly as the Pen glides over the display, and the pen connects magnetical­ly to the side of the tablet.

Note that the Camera app turns on the user-facing camera by default – perhaps assuming you live within Skype. The rear-facing camera offers normal and panorama photograph­y, plus document-scanning and whiteboard­ing options. Virtually everything on the Surface Pro 7 is about productivi­ty.

Ports: USB-C, but no Thunderbol­t yet

If you’ve owned a previous Surface, you’ll be happy to know that the Surface Connector remains the same,

allowing you to use an old Surface charger with the new model. The same goes for the Surface Dock, which Microsoft has never updated.

What is new about the Surface Pro 7 is the addition of the USB-C port – and the removal of miniDispla­yPort. In all, this is a net positive for the Surface Pro range, given the wide and varied range of USB-C hubs to compensate for a single, dedicated port. Tablets like Lenovo’s ThinkPad X1 tablet have previously offered more flexible port options, and it’s nice to see Microsoft’s prosumer tablet line catch up. The Surface Pro X offers a pair of USB-C ports, however, compared to the Surface Pro 7’s single port.

Some rivals go beyond this to offer a Thunderbol­tenabled USB-C port, which allows more bandwidth for connecting to secondary monitors and the like. In the Surface Pro 7’s case, its USB-C port (specifical­ly USB 3.1 Gen 2, at 10GB/s, using DisplayPor­t 1.4) will accommodat­e a pair of external 4K displays at 60Hz. The Surface Pro X’s capabiliti­es slightly outshine the Surface Pro 7’s: it can connect up to two 4,096x2,304 displays using its pair of USB-C ports.

The Surface Pro 7’s USB-C port can also be used to charge the tablet, which offers additional flexibilit­y. Like the Surface Laptop 3, the included charger offers quick-charge capabiliti­es, too.

We’ve beat this drum before, but we’ll sound it again: If the Surface Pro series had Thunderbol­t as well as the Surface Connector, you’d have two high-speed I/O interfaces. You can still connect to the Surface Dock. But there seems to be a missed opportunit­y here.

Don’t forget about the microSD card slot under the kickstand, as in previous models. Sure, Microsoft would like you to upload your smartphone photos directly to the cloud. But as long as point-and-shoot cameras exist, moving the microSD card from the camera to the phone remains an easy way to upload your photos. Most USB-C hubs already include a microSD slot, however.

So far, Microsoft hasn’t announced an SP7 with an integrated or external SIM. For that, you’ll want the Surface Pro X.

Unexpected­ly nice audio

Microsoft has usually designed its tablets with audio in mind. Microsoft’s Surface Pro 7 offers a wide, balanced range of highs and lows, though you’ll still miss some of the deeper bass notes.

The Surface Pro 7 includes Dolby Audio within the Realtek Audio Console app, and the sound enhancemen­t is on by default. Though the app doesn’t provide any equalizer functions, the default configurat­ion sounds suitably balanced for you to enjoy audio over the tablet’s speakers – still a rare luxury in today’s laptops.

DTS Sound Unbound is a surprise, a paid app that’s bundled with the tablet. It asks you to pay to unlock surround sound from both your speakers and

headphones. Its positional audio was, however, the best I can recall since Aureal Semiconduc­tor’s HRTF positional audio demo two decades ago.

Performanc­e: top of the tablets

It would be nice to wave away some of the Surface Pro 7’s performanc­e requiremen­ts, in an argument that a simple tablet deserves some concession­s. That argument holds more water with the Surface Go (£379 from fave.co/37pVEZA). Because there’s a strong chance that our £1,449 Surface Pro 7 will replace a notebook PC as a primary device, however, we can’t use the same criteria.

We also can’t directly compare the Surface Pro 7 to Microsoft’s recent Surface Pro X in all but a small handful of benchmarks. In large part, that’s because the two devices use different microproce­ssors: the Surface Pro 7 uses Intel’s mobile Ice Lake chip, while the Surface Pro X uses a custom chip based on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon architectu­re. The latter can’t run most benchmarks that we use to test Windows laptops and desktops, but you’ll see it in a few where they intersect.

Given the somewhat limited comparison set, we’ve also included the Ice-Lake-based Surface Laptop 3 for Business. This laptop and its tablet cousin actually bear a close resemblanc­e on paper – they share the same exact processor and GPU, clocked identicall­y. As you’ll see from the CPU-specific Cinebench test below, the CPU performanc­e of both the Surface Pro 7 and the Surface Laptop 3 are close.

Our daily experience­s with the Surface Pro 7 – everyday Office use, web browsing and the like

– were more than acceptable. The Surface Pro 7 also offers ‘instant on’ capabiliti­es, waking almost instantly with a combinatio­n of the Windows Helloenabl­ed camera and a fast internal SSD.

Our first test is the older PCMark Creative benchmark, used in part because we could pull results from a couple years’ worth of tablets. It measures light gaming, photo and video editing, and web browsing. Not surprising­ly, the Surface Pro 7 excels.

Note that the default behaviour for the Surface Pro 7, like the Surface Laptop 3, is to prolong battery life, sometimes at the expense of performanc­e. That’s a perfectly acceptable choice, but we also tested while

maximizing the performanc­e (noted with the black outline). In some tests, that made a difference. In others, it didn’t.

In terms of pure CPU workloads, we use the Cinebench benchmark, which renders a CGI scene using the full power of the CPU. The Core i7-1065G7 is a 4-core, 8-thread processor, just like the older chips that power the Lenovo IdeaPad Miix and ThinkPad X1 Tablets. But it’s fabricated at 10nm, giving it a performanc­e advantage over the older 14nm chips.

Our other CPU benchmark is a stress test, a prolonged transcodin­g exercise using the open-source Handbrake app. It tests both the CPU’s stamina and the device’s ability to stay cool during a rigorous workload.

The Surface Pro 7 delivers decent performanc­e here, but we suspect some slight throttling may be at work.

When it comes to graphics benchmarks, the difference­s become clear. We saw some rather significan­t difference­s in GPU frame rate in our 3DMark Sky Diver test, which developer UL touts as a benchmark for gaming machines.

Though the Surface Laptop 3 for Business and the Surface Pro 7 share a common CPU and GPU platform, the difference­s in this benchmark are stark. Why? Using Intel’s Power Gadget widget, we traced the GPU power and frequency as it ran the benchmark. The Surface Pro 7 seems to throttle the GPU pretty hard in this particular test. Though the SP7’s GPU occasional­ly spikes to a peak speed of 3.7GHz, it tends to run at prolonged

periods at 267MHz. The Surface Laptop 3’s typical speed is 283MHz, and with much longer prolonged ‘spikes’ of 3.35GHz to 3.75GHz. This translates to better prolonged graphics performanc­e.

The gist of this result is that quasi-modern games like Grand Theft Auto V will play, though you’ll have to dial down the resolution down to 720p or so and turn off most of the advanced graphics options off. The Iris Plus graphics integrated into Intel’s Core i7-1065G7 provides decent GPU performanc­e, almost (but not quite) to the point of a low-end discrete GPU.

As noted above, we definitely see some throttling going on within the Ice Lake GPU, resulting in a

sharp difference between the Surface Laptop 3 and the Surface Pro 7. Stay focused on the real message, though: The Surface Pro 7 outperform­s all other tablets we’ve tested by a substantia­l amount.

Finally, we look at battery life. We charge to full and then pull the plug as we loop a 4K video, with volume set to about 50 percent, until the battery dies. At a design capacity of 43.2Wh, it’s a tad smaller than the Surface Pro 6’s 45Wh battery. (Full charge capacity on the SP7 was 46.4Wh, indicating some variation in the manufactur­ing.) The older Core i5-8250U can run as low as 10 watts, while the i7-1065G7 runs as low as 12 watts. Did that make

a difference? Perhaps. In any event, battery life just shy of nine hours is satisfacto­ry.

Verdict

It’s no surprise that the Microsoft Surface Pro 7 comes out on top within its limited field of competitor­s, especially because it’s the first Windows tablet we’ve seen with the Intel Ice Lake platform.

The Surface Pro design retains some advantages. For many, the inclusion of a USB-C and an older USB Type-A port represents an ideal compromise, even if we’d have preferred Thunderbol­t. The kickstand is overlooked as an absolute necessity for desk work. Even the chunky bezels make the tablet easier to tote

from room to room while playing Spotify or Netflix. Surface pioneered the Windows tablet market and has delivered a quality experience generation after generation in the years since. Nothing has changed in that regard. Right now, the Surface Pro 7 is the best Windows tablet you can buy. Mark Hachman

Specificat­ions

• 12.3in (2,736x1,824; 267ppi) PixelSense Display

• Windows 10 Home

• Quad-core 10th Gen Intel Core i7-1065G7 processor • Iris Plus 940 GPU

• 16GB LPDDR4x RAM

• 256GB SSD

• 1x USB Type-C

• 1x USB Type-A

• MicroSDXC reader

• Surface Connect

• 3.5mm audio jack

• Wi-Fi 6

• Bluetooth 5.0

• 5Mp front-facing camera, 8Mp rear-facing camera,

w/1080p video

• 292x201x8.5mm

• 790g (not including cover)

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Microsoft’s Surface Pro 7 virtually requires the a Type Cover of some sort, transformi­ng it into a lightweigh­t laptop
Microsoft’s Surface Pro 7 virtually requires the a Type Cover of some sort, transformi­ng it into a lightweigh­t laptop
 ??  ?? Yes, the Microsoft Surface Pro 7 is indeed a tablet
Yes, the Microsoft Surface Pro 7 is indeed a tablet
 ??  ?? After a decade or so, the Surface Pro’s kickstand might be taken for granted. Don’t – it’s still a key part of the Surface Pro 7’s value. The power button and volume rocker are on the top of the tablet
After a decade or so, the Surface Pro’s kickstand might be taken for granted. Don’t – it’s still a key part of the Surface Pro 7’s value. The power button and volume rocker are on the top of the tablet
 ??  ?? Microsoft’s Surface Signature keyboards provide a comfortabl­e typing experience
Microsoft’s Surface Signature keyboards provide a comfortabl­e typing experience
 ??  ?? The long magnetic strip at the top of the keyboard feels a bit weaker than usual in this current version of the Signature Type Cover
The long magnetic strip at the top of the keyboard feels a bit weaker than usual in this current version of the Signature Type Cover
 ??  ?? Microsoft removed the mini-DisplayPor­t connector and replaced it with a USB-C port. The Surface Connector for the Surface Dock remains
Microsoft removed the mini-DisplayPor­t connector and replaced it with a USB-C port. The Surface Connector for the Surface Dock remains
 ??  ?? On the other side of the tablet is a lonely 3.5mm headphone jack
On the other side of the tablet is a lonely 3.5mm headphone jack
 ??  ?? Remember the microSD card slot. It’s hidden, but still useful
Remember the microSD card slot. It’s hidden, but still useful
 ??  ?? If you buy a Surface Pro 7, check out the free 15day trial of the DTS Sound Unbound app. The positional demo is unreasonab­ly fun
If you buy a Surface Pro 7, check out the free 15day trial of the DTS Sound Unbound app. The positional demo is unreasonab­ly fun
 ??  ?? Especially when you dial up the performanc­e, Microsoft’s Surface Pro 7 is the fastest tablet around for everyday use, as measured by PCMark 8
Especially when you dial up the performanc­e, Microsoft’s Surface Pro 7 is the fastest tablet around for everyday use, as measured by PCMark 8
 ??  ?? Two identical processors, two nearly identical scores
Two identical processors, two nearly identical scores
 ??  ?? The chart is distorted by the agonizingl­y slow performanc­e of the Microsoft Surface Go, but the Surface Pro 7 is still superior. Better cooling on the Surface Laptop 3 helps its prevail
The chart is distorted by the agonizingl­y slow performanc­e of the Microsoft Surface Go, but the Surface Pro 7 is still superior. Better cooling on the Surface Laptop 3 helps its prevail
 ??  ?? The Sky Diver benchmark shows sharp difference­s between the Surface Laptop 3 and the Surface Pro 7, but there is also a pronounced performanc­e improvemen­t over the older tablets
The Sky Diver benchmark shows sharp difference­s between the Surface Laptop 3 and the Surface Pro 7, but there is also a pronounced performanc­e improvemen­t over the older tablets
 ??  ?? The Surface Pro 7 delivers about we’d expect of a prosumerle­vel tablet’s battery: about 9 hours from a 43Wh supply
The Surface Pro 7 delivers about we’d expect of a prosumerle­vel tablet’s battery: about 9 hours from a 43Wh supply

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