![]() A Surface Pro without one of them… well, it isn’t complete. They’re important because, while Surface Pro costs £719 (64GB) or £799 (128GB), neither comes with a cover. The Surface Pro has a USB 3.0 port, instead of 2.0 the touchscreen supports 10-points of touch rather than 5-points and it comes with a Wacom digitizer pen, allowing proper pen input and hand writing recognition – a feature many a dodgy iPad stylus attempts to accomplish with little success.įinally, there’s the keyboard covers – the touch-based Touch Cover (£99) and the traditional Type Cover (£109). There are numerous smaller improvements, too. Instead of a merely adequate 2GB RAM, it has 4GB. It adds a mini-DisplayPort port that lets you connect to any monitor at up to 2,560 x 1,600 resolution. #Viceversa pro reviews fullInstead of the crippleware Windows RT, it runs full Windows 8 Pro. Instead of a weedy Nvidia Tegra 3 processor, it has a laptop-grade 1.7GHz Intel Core i5 processor. Its 10.6-inch screen is the same size as the cheaper, £399 Surface RT, but it has an upgraded 1,920 x 1,080 resolution. The Surface Pro’s key features hint at this naked ambition. See the Microsoft Surface Pro for yourself with our video review. Key features: 10.6-inch, 1,920 x 1,080 resolution screen 1.7GHz Intel Core i7 CPU, 4GB RAM 64GB or 128GB storage USB 3.0, microSD, mini-DisplayPort 276.4 x 173 x 13.5mm, 910 grams It’s a digital canvas you can take notes with on a factory floor or building site. It’s a laptop replacement that lets you work on planes, trains and anywhere between. It’s a PC you can plug into a monitor and use in your (home) office. It’s a tablet you can use at home on the sofa. The Surface Pro is nothing less than an attempt to create the perfect PC for the ‘Post PC’ era. It’s neither a straightforward tablet, nor a tablet/laptop hybrid. ![]()
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