As someone who works in IT and gave out Ipads, then switched everyone over to Surface Pros. I honestly believe the surface was a great device. I even took one to use for a few years to work from home. Use the dock and attach a keyboard, mouse, and some monitors and it did great keeping up with what I needed it to do. I felt like i was one of the few people that thought they were great, sadly.
I have a SP7 and I hate this thing. Mine is the i5 model so it's passively cooled. Doing anything besides light internet browsing and this thing heat soaks so fast, then throttles horribly. Battery life isn't very great either unless I'm doing very light tasks. And windows on a tablet still kinda just sucks.
The SP8 finally fixed performance with all models getting a fan so Windows Update won't nuke the device for an hour to do a basic update. But with Intel battery life is always going to be compromised. If they put an AMD CPU in there those things would be really neat, but it's Intel's baby so it's going to have at least some issues. If they could make a Surface Pro X that isn't garbage it might be amazing. Or if they got the M3 CPU into it then it would actually be a useful "pro" tablet unlike the iPad Pro.
As someone who just had to basically retire their surface pro 3, I've always felt like they were great devices that really didn't work well for tech journalists and so they got kind of unfairly punished for doing all the things they were doing for good reasons.
A great example was the power connector - they always got dinged for not having a "standard" one like USB-C, but somehow magsafe returning was amazing, when the surface pro one was already magnetic and it worked incredibly well with the dock.
The keyboards always got dinged since you couldn't type up the Apple keynote from the audience but in reality no one I know has ever had a problem with "having" to use it on a table. The pen always got dismissed with some scribbles, going, "it's ok but I'm not an artist" but never actually checking with an artist, and every year it gets "it looks the same but has a new processor" when realistically what the hell are they supposed to change? When they were thick and powerful everyone complained about the thickness, and when they were thin and slower everyone complained about the performance.
Like, there are actual issues - the repairability is garbage (apparently the newer ones are better?) , they've had weird hardware issues, the BIOS is useless, and the keyboard really should be included in some way, but everyone I know that has one really likes theirs.
About the pen I love my surface for college being able to hand write notes for myself then be able to type up assignments on a physical keyboard (my hand writing is terrible)
The units themselves are great, but the accessories are rubbish. My wife has had a Pro 7 for about 3 years. In that time she's had 4 genuine Microsoft power supplies and 3 or 4 generic Amazon/eBay ones. And, she's on her 3rd keyboard. They just stop working after a while.
I love the Surface Pro 2 I had, unfortunately the charger stopped charging so now it's a big, thicc placemat. Tablet with a full OS and detachable keyboard was my dream since about a decade before any of them existed. Similar to how the Steamdeck was my dream gaming device for a decade before the switch even existed. Now if only I could afford one...
3:2 is great for productivity on a smaller screen for sure.
But I gotta hard disagree on ultrawide. It sure looks pretty but unless you play simulation games exclusively I find that they make the experience worse. Their main benefit is that they're more cost effective (both the screen itself and that it's easier to drive) than a triple monitor setup while satisfying to a decent degree all use cases were a triple monitor setup excels.
Watching movies is way more fun than on a TV.
Working on it is very cool. Research is very good with it like browser on the left and Visual Studio on the right.
Sure, I came at it from a pure gaming angle. From a productivity angle it's almost as good as multi monitor setup but generally cheaper. And for Movies it can be better than multi monitor setups and for sure better than non-ultrawide (for the right movies of course) but for me movies are a social thing and I can't stand watching something alone on the computer, generally.
Gonna agree or disagree with both of you - I think gaming is worse most of the time on an ultra wide but doing productivity side by side is really cool, and like you mentioned watching movies works very well with 2.4:1 or similar aspect ratios
I've had my ultrawide for about 4 years and games that support it look amazing, not had an issue. Games that don't. I just play in 16:9, the black bars arnt much of an issue given that its no real loss as the alternative is either a stretched out image or use a 16:9 monitor.
Same, ultrawide is only awesome if you do everything in windows and arrange things. Which in turn brings up the question, why not just put 3 monitors side-by-side, play on the middle one in 16:9 and avoid all the software issues, then still have that huge horizontal space for multitasking?
Sure it's not a big downside, but I also just don't see the upside of it. Plus I can always soft-connect the 3 screens to show one game across all three of them.
Not a fair comparison at all though. A 34” 1440p UW is basically like taking a 27” 1440p and adding another ~66% to the original width. It’s physically smaller than two 16:9 monitors of comparable density.
3 monitors side by side takes up a lot more space. The 2x23” I have stacked on top of my 34” ultrawide are already much wider than the UW. I couldn’t fit three monitors on my larger than average desk made out of an IKEA tabletop, without removing my speakers and having the side monitors overhang.
Ultrawide is perfect for gaming, but 3:2 is the play for laptops.
That really depends on the kind of games you're playing. I actually sold off my 49" Samsung ultrawide because most of the games I played on it didn't really make good use of it (like Project Diablo 2, Grim Dawn and other ARPGs, as well as RTSes like AoE2 HD, Star Wars Galactic Battlegrounds etc.)
I got a 16:10 monitor in its place and it suits my games so much better. Heck, I think even a 4:3 or 3:2 monitor would suite me well.
Unfortunately for you "you have no idea how to play games". Games have evolved a lot as well as gameplay. Also, you have to keep in mind the fact that you didn't evolve at all.
For your knowledge 49" monitor is net superior in RTS games, it is at the point of cheating. But I guess you are doodoo player in terms of vision.
Depends on the model, this can be opened up and lightly serviced, the CPU and ram are all soldered, but it can be dismantled and the ssd and battery can be replaced.