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first look:Microsoft Surface |
We just had our first hands-on with the Microsoft Surface,
the brand spanking new device which appears to be Microsoft’s loud and
clear answer to the Apple i Pad, the Mac Book Air, the menagerie of
Android-powered tablets, the existing suite of Windows-powered tablets —
basically, the entire landscape of today’s most powerful and popular
mobile computing devices. It’s a very ambitious effort that the company
is making great pains to emphasize has been built by Microsoft from the
inside out, from the hardware to the software.
Now it bears mention that quite a few details on the Surface are hard
to pin down. There will be two main versions of the device, the Microsoft Surface
for Windows RT, and the Microsoft Surface for Windows 8 Pro. Microsoft
has made it clear that it has contracted the manufacturing of the device
as a whole, but it is not giving much color on the granular level: Who
has built the processors that make up the Surface, the other components
that make it up and so on. Pricing has not been revealed at all —
Microsoft is only saying both the RT consumer version and the higher
powered Pro versions will be at price points that are “competitive” to
their peers. The RT should be out in time for the holidays (at the same
time that Windows 8 should roll out) and the Pro version of the tablet will come out three months later.
Below are images from our hands-on with the device. Click on each one to enlarge it.
First we got a look at the kickstand that’s built in to the Surface,
which is a clear differentiator from the iPad, for which users have to
buy separate accessories. The kickstand was made to click in and out on
the tablet with ease and style, and a satisfying “snap” sound — the
company says it spent lots of time developing the three hinges that make
it work, modeling them after the doors on a luxury car.
It has a soft rubbery feeling, but the keys don’t compress when you
touch them. It also does not bend at all, unlike iPad covers —
obviously, as it does more than just cover the screen. Microsoft says it
made the hinges and cover to give it a bookish feeling. They come in
several different colors.
Vapor MG, the trademarked Magnesium alloy developed by Microsoft that
makes up both the inside skeleton and the outside of the Surface.
Microsoft is proud of this because it’s both strong, lightweight, and
sleek — several times they pointed out to us that it’s far superior to
plastic, which is pretty clear when you get a look and feel of it
You can also get a more traditional, tactile “button” keyboard if that’s
what you prefer. They say that it’s faster and quicker than the garden
variety onscreen keyboards on existing tablets.

Then at the end was the big reveal — the screen switched on (yes,
there was only one part of the hands-on that gave me a feel of how the
touch screen works.) It absolutely is a high-definition screen, but I
wasn’t given the ability to zoom in and out of a photo to see how
quickly you could really render an image.
As for the feel of the device? Its edges have a bit of a slope to
them, but they are certainly more squared-off than the latest versions
of the iPad. Personally I feel like it ends a more business-like feel to
the Surface, where the iPad feels more fully for entertainment
purposes. But again, a totally subjective take on that.
In all it is a very nice, well-thought out, impressive effort from
the folks up in Redmond (by the way, it’s still a mystery as to why this
event was held in Los Angeles, but I suppose it was a nice excuse for
us tech-focused folks to visit the headquarters of glitz and glam.) We
still could be several months out from the Surface’s actual launch, but
what we’ve seen so far looks pretty promising.
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