Wednesday, October 3rd 2018

Microsoft Announces Surface Pro 6, Surface Laptop 2 and Surface Studio 2

Somewhat new on the inside, identical on the outside. That could well be the summary of Microsoft's renovation of its Surface product range yesterday. At a special event in New York, several company executives launched the new Surface Pro 6, Surface Laptop 2 and Surface Studio 2.

The event didn't stop there: Windows 10 October 2018 Update, Microsoft's great operating system update, is now available for download, although the surprise of the event was the new Surface Headphones with noise cancellation and Cortana support.
Rumors pointed to a modest renewal of the models of the previous generation, and the event confirmed these leaks. The improvements came mainly on the inside features of these machines, with only a few aesthetic changes in products that are quite conservative. These are the highlights of each one:
  • Surface Pro 6: Microsoft removed model numbering last year ("Surface Pro 5" was in fact simply called "Surface Pro") only to recover it now with this latest revision. The new models have Intel's 8th Gen processors and a new matte black finish, but the rest of the features remain and for example we still don't have USB-C ports. They will be available on October 16th starting at $899.
  • Surface Laptop 2: as in the case of Microsoft convertibles, the company's laptop also integrates Intel's 8th Gen processors. The difference is more noticeable here, though, because the original Surface Laptop integrated dual-core microprocessors. Almost no changes in design either: the Alcantara fabric is again the star of the show, but the family also has a model with a matte black finish. There is an additional, welcome improvement compared to the first generation models: in this second generation we have more RAM, and for the base model we will have 8 GB of RAM (and 128 GB SSD). They will be available on October 16th, and will be priced starting at $999.
  • Surface Studio 2: The spectacular format of this All-In-One is still just as spectacular, but now its screen improves dramatically according to Microsoft: it has 38% more brightness and 22% more contrast. In addition we have a new Pascal-based NVIDIA GPU that promises "6 TFLOPS" of performance (similar to what we would achieve with a GTX 1070). The jump to SSD (no more hybrid disks) and the addition of one USB-C connector contrasts with the decision to keep 7th Gen Intel Core processors inside. There is no availability date, but we know that the starting (and spectacular) price for the 16 GB RAM model will be $3,499.
The absence of USB-C ports on the Surface Pro 6 and the Surface Laptop 2 -but hey, they do have a Surface Connect charging port, duh- is a bit strange since products such as Surface Book 2 or Surface Go have integrated these connectors. Also contradictory is the decision not to update the processors of a Surface Studio 2 that is halfway to a more ambitious renovation.

These hardware launches were accompanied by a new payment option called Surface All Access. The idea here is similar to the Xbox All Access proposal, but in this case Microsoft combines the devices of the Surface family with access to Office 365 through a monthly payment that will depend on the machine chosen. For example, a Surface Go with its Type Cover and two years of Office 365 will cost around $600 instead of the $670 that would cost to buy the model in the conventional way.
Source: Windows Blog
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4 Comments on Microsoft Announces Surface Pro 6, Surface Laptop 2 and Surface Studio 2

#1
Totally
"The absence of USB-C ports on the Surface Pro 6 and the Surface Laptop 2 -but hey, they do have a Surface Connect charging port, duh- is a bit strange since products such as Surface Book 2 or Surface Go have integrated these connectors. Also contradictory is the decision not to update the processors of a Surface Studio 2 that is halfway to a more ambitious renovation. "

You really need to clean that bit up.

Suggestion

"The absence of USB-C ports on the Surface Pro 6 and the Surface Laptop 2 is a bit strange, since products such as Surface Book 2 or Surface Go have integrated these connectors, but hey they do have a Surface Connect charging port. Another point of controversy is the decision not to update the processors of a Surface Studio 2 leaving the refresh feeling half-baked."
Posted on Reply
#2
enya64
My Surface Pro 4 is friggin amazing still. I remember selling my Ipad to get it from Best Buy at launch. Just having remote connection to my home PCs "just work" the last few years has changed the way I work. Using my phone as a hotspot and connecting to my workstation at my office when I'm in my car has opened up so many possibilities for on the go research. I've even had no issues streaming 4k video from my bedroom pc while sitting on my balcony.

My only caveat was the single USB 3.0 port when there should have been at least 2 built in. I've had to pick up a 1to4 USB 3.0 adapter and the Surface Pro 4 would be an instant purchase for me if the ports were built in.
Posted on Reply
#3
ypsylon
Well, well. I'm circling around Wacom Mobile Studio Pro 16 for a while. However considering the price specs are abysmal for 2018.

Far from being M$ fan, but maybe, just maybe Surface Studio 2 could be the answer?? Even considering it is far less portable. Your turn Wacom, because MSP 13/16 are horribly out of date even for most basic works (models with 8GB are just a joke when system alone eats upwards of 5GB without any art software).
Posted on Reply
#4
FordGT90Concept
"I go fast!1!11!1!"
So the takeaway from this is Microsoft likes surfaces. Obsessed, even. :laugh:
Posted on Reply
Dec 30th, 2024 08:28 EST change timezone

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