Microsoft Unveils Surface Laptops To Fulfill 'PC For Every Single Person' Vision (venturebeat.com) 65
Microsoft today unveiled the Surface Laptop Go with a 12.4-inch touchscreen for $549, its cheapest and lightest (2.45lbs) laptop yet. The company also updated the Surface Pro X with SQ2 -- Microsoft's second-generation custom ARM chip co-engineered with Qualcomm -- for $1,500. Both are available for preorder today and ship on October 13. From a report: Those are the highlights. But a single sentence in Microsoft's announcement stood out to us. "What started as a vision for a PC in every single home has now evolved to the need for a PC for every single person," Panos Panay, head of engineering for all of Microsoft's devices, said in press briefing. For decades, Bill Gates' vision was "A computer on every desk, and in every home, running Microsoft software." That's why even in 2020, Windows 10 is running on 1 billion devices.
[...] Surface Laptop Go is powered by Intel's 10th generation i5 QuadCore processor, up to 16GB RAM and 256GB storage, and up to 13 hours of battery life. Microsoft is also touting a full-size keyboard with 1.3mm key travel and a fingerprint power button for one touch sign-in. Then there's a 720p HD camera, Studio Mics, Omnisonic Speakers, Dolby Audio, USB A, USB C, audio jack, and the Surface connector.
[...] Surface Laptop Go is powered by Intel's 10th generation i5 QuadCore processor, up to 16GB RAM and 256GB storage, and up to 13 hours of battery life. Microsoft is also touting a full-size keyboard with 1.3mm key travel and a fingerprint power button for one touch sign-in. Then there's a 720p HD camera, Studio Mics, Omnisonic Speakers, Dolby Audio, USB A, USB C, audio jack, and the Surface connector.
if they are priced like their folding phone (Score:2)
So... (Score:2)
Anonymous coward posting is (sporadically) disabled. Account creation with the obvious troll name "JEW ANNIHILATOR" is ok.
To the new management, and this is just a humble opinion, perhaps hand out more points and have trust in the moderation system that has worked for about 20 years?
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That would require a big team that checks every name registered, or some faulty as hell script.
When demading for some rule etc, you have to think on how it will be implemented as well.
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Just imagine the same programmers implementing a black list of words
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Just imagine ...
In my mind's eye, I see a great leaning tower of if-thens, oozing with a sludge of string literals...
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Agreed, my point was more regarding disabling AC than checking registrations. If there's a big uptick in AC troll/spam then extra mod points would let folks like me use them more liberally to downvote. I like to use mine sparingly for upvoting.
Some of the best stuff over the years has been from AC posts, disabling takes away a integral part of /. imvho.
I'll stick with my Raspberry Pi, thanks... (Score:1)
If $549 and 2.45lbs is the "cheapest and lightest" you've got, I'll stick with my $75 Raspberry Pi 4 instead. I don't need that Windows 10 spyware crap either. Thanks but no thanks.
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It takes more than a minute to log in after I've entered the PIN
Call tech support, because that's not normal.
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The base model Surface Laptop Go is $550 (Core i5-1035G1, 4GB RAM, 64GB eMMC), though the configuration that most people should actually consider buying is $700 (Core i5-1035G1, 8GB RAM, 128GB SSD.). That's mid-range laptop territory. You can get better specs at that price point elsewhere but you'll give up build quality compared to Microsoft's hardware, assuming the new model is on par with Microsoft's previous computers. The one big shortcoming is the relatively low resolution 1536x1024 display; I'd have
Really? (Score:2)
I didn't see 'any single person' using one of those things other than in a movie or a TV series who got them for free.
Re:Really? (Score:5, Informative)
Are you talking about the MS Surface product line in general? It is actually pretty popular.
About a third of my department uses some MS surface. If you are curious, another third use some mac laptops, while the last third uses some Dell.
The price-performance-portability tradeoff is really good.
I am using a Dell at the moment. But my next laptop could be a Surface. I need to check how Debian compatible they would be.
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Surface Pro 3... the bane of my existence (Score:3)
Glitches with AHCI drivers meant units could freeze at the Surface logo and necessitate physical access to fix
If left in a car boot on a cold winter day, they would end up with internal condensation and rapidly die
Firmware issues meant the thermals were poorly managed, resulting in early failures due to excessive, rapid temperature changes
Touchscreens would randomly break, with phantom clicks all over th
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I didn't see 'any single person' using one of those things other than in a movie or a TV series who got them for free.
Not looking or maybe it's a local issue? The Surface is not just popular it's an actual major revenue stream for Microsoft bringing in over $5bn. Personally I see them all over the place. We have a couple of them here too, great little devices for people who don't need a serious work laptop, but unreliable as heck. Personally both mine and my GF have sent ours for a warranty claim (so 100% failure rate there), at our work where IT rolled out 15000 of the Pro 6 they ended up with around 30% failures.
Mind you
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I didn't see 'any single person' using one of those things other than in a movie or a TV series who got them for free.
Son's school handed them out to everyone. No problems so far.
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That would be the handed out for free bit.
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Pop. (Score:2)
PC for every single person? (Score:5, Funny)
What about people who are married or have girlfriends?
Re:PC for every single person? (Score:5, Funny)
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If you can't open it we don't want it (Score:2)
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Don't get me wrong, I like devices that you can open and repair too; i like to do ram upgrades, and SSD upgrades, as much as anyone. And I hate throwing away perfectly good hardware just because its been glued to a broken screen.
" if someone of importance at your company "
If they're of such importance why isn't their stuff just backed up, ready to restore on another device.
I'm curious what your plan is for when someone of importance at your company has a device stolen, or the SSD simply fails.
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Because real backup requires tape and restorable backups require the use of Open Source software - otherwise, when you come to do a restore, you find that the software you used for the backups is the "old, no longer supported version" and you are completely shafted.
It should be immediately obvious that Microsoft users probably have no backups, and if they do, they are probably not restorable.
Hence th
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TLDR:
If you are the victim of an advanced persistent threat... your backups are only as good as the very last time you restored them in a separate environment and verified manually everything you need is really there. And THAT is unfortunately, a pretty high bar.
Full post
real backup requires tape
If you are at the scale where you have dedicated backup IT staff, and budget to operate MULTIPLE tape systems; yes, that's "gold standard".
The average small/medium business using tape backups might as well just be send their backups to dev-
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> Because real backup requires tape
Wha???
No, it requires off-site copies.
> require the use of Open Source software
Che???
Because open source software doesn't have bugs? Because open source software means that your hardware doesn't fail?
If your "old, no longer supported version" automatically will no longer do a restore, and I'm making a large assumption here that you do test restores while your product is supported, and your assessment when selecting a product didn't reveal that the second it falls out
A computer on every desk, ... (Score:3)
... and in every home
How about a computer in every pocket? Get with the times.
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What would you do with 4 of them?
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A Beowulf cluster of pockets.
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5. There's that little lighter/coke pocket too.
Trash (Score:1)
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Cheaper than a Macbook, and much more desirable IMHO. Anybody who hasn't tried touchscreen Windows 10 with a stylus in one hand really ought to.
(I wouldn't buy either of those two with my own money though...)
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Mouse/kb much more precise and a lot faster.
Wonder why mobile phones don't come with mice and keyboards then.
Oh wait I know. Because there's a use case for smaller devices without keyboards and mice, when you aren't going to be typing a lot or needing precise mouse movement and don't want to carry that stuff around.
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Yeah. It sucks. Mouse/kb much more precise and a lot faster. Also doesn't leave my screen a mess of markings.
Stylae don't leave markings, you're thinking of your cheez-it covered fingers.
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Yawn (Score:3)
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This is the strangest advertising gimmick since Apple's "It's wicked fast!"(r)(tm) for the Mac 2 Fx decades ago.
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Can't even watch 1080p movies in native resolution.
On a 12" screen all I have to wonder is why would you waste the battery life on those pixels. Or maybe it'll come with a fancy case that has a built in magnifying glass.
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4GB RAM? Ouch. When I ran Windows 10, my working set immediately after booting, before loading any applications, was over 6GB.
And 64GB of storage? Is that even enough to run Windows Update the next time there's a new OS?
Low-end hardware with terrible specs is literally one of the biggest reasons why people hated Vista so much. There were lawsuits.
nah (Score:4, Interesting)
I'm usually defending MS here but I got a Surface Pro 4 and it was...meh. The low RAM and underpowered CPU made it annoying to use, and it was definitely more expensive than the hardware would warrant. I just don't trust MS on these things anymore.
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I'm usually defending MS here but I got a Surface Pro 4 and it was...meh. The low RAM and underpowered CPU made it annoying to use, and it was definitely more expensive than the hardware would warrant. I just don't trust MS on these things anymore.
I honestly wonder what you expect. Given how it was by far one of the thinnest devices on the market, and one of only a couple that were in a full tablet form factor yet ran a windows OS, did you think you would get comparable performance specs to a laptop?
If you didn't buy these devices for the form factor then you bought the wrong device. They've gotten much better on the performance front now but you still pay a premium for the form factor. If you're looking for price/performance don't buy a thin tablet,
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I didn't expect comparable performance specs to a laptop, but I did expect it to not freeze and stutter like a PC from the 1990s. I wasn't trying to do anything complicated or graphically intensive on it. I did buy it for the form factor, and chose it over the similarly priced iPad pro 12.9", and I regret going with it instead of the ipad.
Good luck because phones exist now (Score:2)
Everyone has a computer in their pocket and many don't have a use for a desktop or laptop anymore.
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Everyone has a computer in their pocket and many don't have a use for a desktop or laptop anymore.
I have a desktop, although it's a fairly small mini-itx with a small monitor.
But anyway, I haven't had a laptop since I got my first smartphone. No need anymore.
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I get the feeling people high up at Microsoft are still stuck thinking about how their stuff is no longer running on most people's computing devices. They've attempted so many weird melds of desktop computers and phones over the past decade. Shot themselves in the foot as often as not, like with Windows 8 Metro. Now they're pushing an ARM-based "PCs for everyone"? I don't see it having much of a niche. 12" is still a bit tiny for serious work or serious gaming. Will it even run Windows software? It doesn't
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Every single person? (Score:2)
Most people in developed nations have computers already, they're called smartphones. Of course, among the tech-minded like readers of Slashdot, a smartphone is no substitute for a PC, but for many people, they are good enough. Good luck with that, Microsoft!
"Microsoft today unveiled".... (Score:2)
(stops reading).
Seriously, I have absolutely no interest in anything that Microsoft is selling, ESPECIALLY hardware. I grudgingly continue to use Windows solely because Adobe refuses to port Creative Cloud to Linux. And some day, when it's mature enough, I'll switch to Darktable and both Microsoft and Adobe can go straight to hell.
Ad campaign obviously started by wealthy execs (Score:3)
Aside from the fact, already mentioned, that cell phones eliminate the need for everyone to have a computer, there's a big proportion of the population for whom $550 is not a trivial amount. Especially in this weird Covid era, a lot of people are scrambling for rent and food money.
Hey, MS is wealthy right? Why not start a giveaway program? Great PR, and it furthers their goal of ruling, I mean serving, the world.
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> cell phones eliminate the need for everyone to have a computer
Sure as long as you incorrectly assume that all anyone ever does is check their email and surf a few websites.
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Wake me up when a cell phone can compile large projects, run PC games like Microsoft Flight Simulator or support my steam VR headset.
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I have a $299 lappy with a Ryzen 3. It serves all basic computing needs. I run Linux on it and I can compile software or whatever. $550 is a lot.
Every single person? Oh really... (Score:2)
I want it to come just with Linux installed (natively), no Windows.
Yeah thought not.
Fuck you, Microsoft (Score:2)
Sell PCs if you can't sell phones (Score:1)
I'm happy with my desktop (Score:1)
I'm happy with my desktop, some people I am sure have a laptop and will view getting a MS Surface as an upgrade, I see it as getting a down grade, in bang for buck, performance and usability.
If you want to sell some hardware why not sell a unit like the xbox but its a PC with a predefined spec and capability, able to run productivity Apps and games, MS could make a qua-zillion dollar business out of this.
I'll even throw in a name for free call it the winbox.
Memory and Storage (Score:2)
Re: Memory and Storage (Score:2)
Cos marketing got involved and decided the 'Go' brand should compete with underspecced Chromebooks.
Embarrassing when one can buy a phone for less with more RAM!