USA TODAY International Edition

Microsoft’s Surface offers clues to the future

Company- specific features won’t be as key

- Bob O’Donnell

NEW YORK – One of the greatest things the tech world brought us is gadgets. From tricked- out smartphone­s and notebooks to cloud- connected smart home appliances, the industry has built a massive economy around cool tech devices that now sit at the heart of our daily lives.

Until now, the vast majority of groundbrea­king products have been based on company- specific advances – think Apple’s iOS and the iPhone it enabled. As we head toward a decade change, however, we’re on the cusp of a new era in which those proprietar­y capabiliti­es become nearly irrelevant.

Ironically, it was this week’s launch of a number of very Microsoft- specific advances to their Surface line of devices that really hit this point home. On the, ahem, surface of it, Microsoft unveiled the latest generation of their notebook, tablet and 2- in- 1 products – all to be available this year – and previewed some intriguing new dualscreen foldable devices they will be bringing to market for holiday 2020.

The Surface Laptop 3, now available in both 13- inch and 15- inch screen sizes, the Surface Pro 7 and even the Surface Pro X – which features a Microsoft labeled SQ1 chip built in conjunctio­n with Qualcomm – are extensions to the company’s now well- known and successful line of mobile computers.

Each of the new products featured exactly the kind of improvemen­ts you’d expect them to have – faster processors, more storage, new connectors, better battery life and so forth. All of the enhancemen­ts are important and highlight the company’s desire to continue refining the Surface experience, but frankly, they’re not that exciting.

The Surface Pro X does up the game to a degree by being the company’s first Windows on ARM- based Always Connected PC, or ACPC. What that means is the processor, which is based on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon chips used in other ACPCs, as well as many Android- based smartphone­s, isn’t based on the x86 instructio­n set used in Intel and AMD chips, but rather ARM instructio­ns that are commonly used in smartphone­s and other non- PC devices.

Thankfully, you’ll never have to worry about it because all existing Windows applicatio­ns will function on the device – but how they run under the hood is a bit different.

Two key benefits of using the ACPC architectu­re is that it gives longer battery life than traditiona­l notebooks, and it includes a built- in LTE modem, allowing it to be always connected to the Internet ( as long as you sign up for a data plan for it with your carrier).

One other clever feature of the Surface Pro X is that it features a special carrying and charging pocket for the included pen in the magnetical­ly attached keyboard you use with the device. As with other Surfaces, you can use the pen for note- taking, annotation­s, drawing and much more.

What was particular­ly interestin­g about the Surface launches overall, however, was the semiconduc­tor chiprelate­d news that came along with them.

In sum, Microsoft highlighte­d several new processors with their traditiona­l partner Intel ( including the first usage of a forthcomin­g Intel Lakefield chip in next year’s Surface Duo foldable device), and the first partnershi­ps with both Qualcomm and AMD for CPUs inside their devices.

The AMD news was particular­ly sweet for the company because the special semi- custom Ryzen CPU that AMD created for Microsoft is going into its highest- performing new device, the Surface Laptop 3 15- inch version. After having been seen as a lower- cost, lower- performing alternativ­e to Intel for many years, jumping into a higher- end, faster performing device says a great deal about how far AMD has come recently.

In addition to the technical details, what’s interestin­g about these new CPU choices is that it essentiall­y evens the playing field and turns what used to be considered a critical differentiator into a simple question of choice. Yes, there certainly will be differences among the devices that support the new chips, but having Intel-, AMD- and Qualcommba­sed options means that Microsoft essentiall­y believes none is more important than the other.

This sense of equality extended to operating systems as well, most notably on the Surface Neo and Surface Duo foldable devices. The Intel Lakefieldbased Neo will run a variant of Windows called Windows 10X that’s optimized for dual- screen devices. The similar- looking “mini me” version of the Neo is the smartphone- like Surface Duo, which will be based on Qualcomm Snapdragon chips and run Google’s Android.

Again, there will obviously be differences between Windows 10X and Android, but Microsoft is working to provide as similar an experience as possible across the two devices.

. The primary way is through Microsoft applicatio­ns – including mobile versions of Office apps – as well as some UI extensions to Android that Microsoft already has worked with Google to create.

The reason this is all happening now is because of our growing dependence on cloud- based applicatio­ns and services. This developmen­t has been going on for several years.

We have now reached a point, however, where the underlying device operating system used on different devices simply doesn’t matter anymore – everything is delivered from the cloud and can be done so in a consistent way across different platforms, screen sizes and chips running inside.

Sure, people are going to continue caring about specific devices and will continue to look for features or functions that provide meaningful differentiatio­n across a diverse set of product choices.

Fundamenta­lly, though, we’re about to embark on an age when some of what used to be the most important factors in selecting one product over another become less so and we’ll have a much wider range ( and likely larger collection) of devices we can use to achieve whatever it is we want to do.

 ?? MICROSOFT ?? In the foreground, left to right, are Microsoft’s new Surface Neo, Surface Duo, and Surface Earbuds. At rear, left to right, are the Surface Laptop 3, Surface Pro 7, and Surface Pro X.
MICROSOFT In the foreground, left to right, are Microsoft’s new Surface Neo, Surface Duo, and Surface Earbuds. At rear, left to right, are the Surface Laptop 3, Surface Pro 7, and Surface Pro X.

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