Friday 13 March 2015

The best Surface yet is more than a tablet, less than a laptop

The Good The Surface Pro 3 is thinner and lighter than the previous two versions, despite having a larger 12-inch display and higher screen resolution. A new kickstand makes it easier to set up and use, and the keyboard cover remains a best-in-class example. The Surface Pro 3 is now optimized for a digital pen, which is included.
The Bad That excellent keyboard cover is not included in the base price, and its improved touchpad still doesn't measure up. The chassis lacks pen storage, and even with tweaked kickstand and keyboard hinges, the Surface Pro 3 still doesn't fit perfectly on the lap.
The Bottom Line While the new Surface Pro 3 is Microsoft's best PC to date, it's more successfTablets are great for consuming entertainment, while laptops and other full PCs are required to actually create those works, or so the conventional wisdom goes. Some substitute the charged word "productivity" for creation, but the pitch is the same. You need one device for A, B, and C, and another for X, Y, and Z.
That means there's a sizable group of people out there spending at least part of the time lugging around a laptop and a tablet simultaneously. I've been guilty of that, usually packing a 13-inch ultrabook or MacBook Air and an iPad into my carry-on bag for airline flights.
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By Prosperity PnP Tech
With the new Surface Pro 3 from Microsoft, the software powerhouse (and occasional hardware maker) says it finally has the single grand unified device that will satisfy both the creation and consumption instincts equally. You'll feel just as at home watching a movie or reading a book as you will editing video footage or writing your novel.ul as a tablet than a laptop replacement.That's largely the same pitch, of course, we got for the Surface Pro and Surface Pro 2 tablets, which points to the difficulty in translating the full Windows 8.1 experience freely between a laptop and tablet. Dozens of our hands-on reviews of devices ranging from 8-inch slates to 13-inch two-in-one hybrids back this up, as does the mixed reception to the first two generations of the Surface Pro.
Both of those devices, as well as the Surface Pro 3, at least begin with the right idea and smartly lean toward the laptop side of the tablet spectrum, including Intel Core i-series CPUs and keyboard covers designed to feel more like laptop keyboards.
With the Surface Pro 3, starting at $799 or £639 for an Intel Core i3 CPU and a 64GB SSD, we can see the thinking at Microsoft start to lean even more toward the laptop side, with a new kickstand and touch cover that allow you to work at almost any angle. Our review configuration is upgraded to a Core i5 CPU and 256GB SSD, which costs $1,299 or £1,109, while the type cover keyboard is an additional $129 or £110.The new Surface Pro is thinner than its predecessors, with a larger, higher-resolution screen. On that mark alone, it outshines the Pro and Pro 2. The internal specs and performance are largely similar to the Pro 2, but that means it's still just as fast as any current-gen premium laptop.
With the generation-over-generation tweaks to the design, especially the hinge and keyboard, you can see a dedicated push towards advancing the cause of practical usability. It's not entirely there yet, and it's still a leap to say this will be a true laptop replacement for most people, but the Surface Pro 3 is the first Surface device I feel confident in saying I could get away with using as a primary PC.
Microsoft Surface Pro 3Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga 2 ProMacBook Air 13-inch (June 2013)
Price as reviewed$1,299$999$1,099
Display size/resolution12-inch, 2,160 x 1,440 touch screen13.3-inch, 3,200 x 1,800 touch screen13.3-inch, 1,440 x 900 screen
PC CPU1.9GHz Intel Core i5 4300U1.6GHz Intel Core i5 4200U1.3GHz Intel Core i5 4250U
PC Memory8GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz4GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz4GB DDR3 SDRAM 1,600MHz
Graphics1,792MB (shared) Intel HD Graphics 44001,792MB (shared) Intel HD Graphics 44001,024MB Intel HD Graphics5000
Storage256GB SSD hard drive128GB SSD hard drive128GB SSD hard drive
Optical driveNoneNoneNone
Networking802.11a/c wireless, Bluetooth 4.0802.11b/g/n wireless, Bluetooth 4.0802.11a/c wireless, Bluetooth 4.0
Operating systemWindows 8.1 (64-bit)Windows 8.1 (64-bit)OSX Mountain Lion 10.8.4

Design and features

Despite the talk of this being the thinnest Intel Core i-series device to date, it still doesn't feel quite as thin and ethereal as, for example, the iPad Air. But its thinner body, coupled with a larger 12-inch screen, give it a more upscale feel than either the Pro or Pro 2, which were criticized for a certain boxiness.
Both of the previous Surface Pro models had 10.6-inch screens and were 13mm thick, with a footprint of 10.8 inches by 6.8 inches. This new 12-inch version is 11.5 inches by 7.9 inches, but its thickness drops to an impressive 9.1mm. The Pro 3 is also a tad lighter than its predecessor: 800 grams versus 900. Again, when you consider the larger screen, that's a worthy achievement.
With a wink and a nod, Microsoft says this new Surface Pro design isn't exactly fanless, but it might as well be. That's because the new system internals, designed in partnership with Intel, allow the system run run not only ultra-low-voltage Core i3 or i5 CPUs, but also Core i7 ones, with a slim, quiet fan moving air as needed, allegedly without that telltale whirring sound, or a fan exhaust blowing on your hands. Our Surface Pro 3, a midrange model with an Intel Core i5 CPU, certainly felt cool during our hands-on testing, but an audible fan also kicked in at times. To call the experience fanless-like would not be accurate.
One major difference in the new design is the kickstand, which can be adjusted to nearly any angle between 22 degrees and 150 degrees. That's especially useful for tilting the screen way back, as an artist using a drafting table might, but as the owner of normal-size legs for a 6-foot-tall man, I still had a hard time getting the Surface Pro 3 to sit comfortably on my lap. The kickstand either kept the screen angle too severe to see clearly while seated, or else the end of the kickstand was sliding off my knees when I tilted the screen further back.Taking the type cover and kicking in its additional top-edge magnetic hinge, raising the back edge of the keyboard to a better angle, helped a bit, as the raised angle feels much more natural for typing (which is why nearly every PC keyboard has tiny feet at the back edge). It's a small change, but one that says Microsoft is thinking seriously about ergonomics.

Of portrait modes and pens

It may take a second to spot, but there's one major change to the Surface design ID this time around. The capacitive touch button Windows logo -- which brings you back to the Windows 8 tile interface -- has shifted from the bottom long edge of the chassis to one of the shorter edges.
There are two reasons for that, to my mind. First, the new keyboard covers cover the area where the original Windows button was located when you use the second tilt-up hinge. Second, moving the Windows logo button to the short edge points users toward using the device in portrait mode. I've found that most Windows tablets and hybrids are designed around use in a laptop-like landscape mode, which has the screen lying against its longest side, while the all-popular Apple iPad is primarily understood as a device to be held upright in portrait mode, much like a book or magazine.
This ties directly into Microsoft's strong pitch for the Surface Pro 3 as an educational device for note-taking, annotation, drawing, and sketching. The included battery-powered Bluetooth pen is metallic, and more substantial than versions I've tried with other Windows 8 tablets, such as the 8-inch Asus VivoTab 8.
In the case of the Asus, the Wacom stylus was made of thin plastic, but at least it slid right into an internal slot in the tablet body. For the Surface Pro 3, you'll need to either keep in your pocket or bag, or perhaps slide it behind your ear, unless you have a sold-separately type cover and its awkward stick-on stylus-holding loop.
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While the Surface Pro pen (Microsoft would prefer you call it a pen rather than a stylus) works in a variety of apps, including The New York Times crossword puzzle app, OneNote is an easy example of how it works for drawing and taking notes. If you have all your Microsoft cloud services properly set up, your OneNote files can sync to other devices such as your phone (with cross-platform support on Android and iOS devices) or laptop (Windows or Mac). Even better, just click once on the Pen's top to open OneNote, even if your Surface is asleep, and notes are automatically saved.

A great keyboard, for a tablet

The tragedy of the Surface Pro has always been that the single coolest thing about it doesn't actually come in the box. The excellent type cover, which acts as a screen protector, full keyboard, and touchpad interface, stubbornly remains a sold-separately accessory, despite the fact that I can't imagine (or recommend) anyone ever buying a Surface without one. At $129 or £110, it's expensive for an add-on keyboard, but it's also still the main wow factor of the Surface.
The new type cover for Surface Pro 3 is larger than its predecessors, although the older versions will still work -- they just won't cover the entire screen when the flap is closed. It feels like the best add-ontablet keyboard you can buy, while still falling short of a decent budget laptop keyboard. The secondary hinge, really just a line near the top edge you can fold the cover along, lifts the rear up and holds it against the body via a magnetic connection, giving you a more natural typing angle. It's an excellent ergonomic improvement, although it makes typing louder and clackier.
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Sarah Tew/CNET
The touchpad built into the type cover is better than the last version we tried, made of what a Microsoft rep described as a "ceramic fabric" material. But despite the improvements, it's still not responsive, or tap-sensitive, enough for fast-track multitaskers, and the surface area is too shallow to easily navigate all around the screen. You'll most likely develop a shorthand combination of touchscreen and touchpad, plus pen, to get around.
The screen you'll spend a lot of time touching is a better-than-HD display, measuring 12 inches diagonally with a 2,160x1,440-pixel resolution. The IPS panel looks clear and bright, has excellent off-axis viewing angles, and follows a growing trend toward better-than-HD displays. Do you need more pixels on a 12-inch screen? That's debatable, but some 13-inch models are already hitting 3,200x1,800 pixels.
Microsoft Surface Pro 3
Videomini-DisplayPort
AudioStereo speakers, headphone jack
Data1 USB 3.0, microSD card reader
Networking802.11ac Wi-Fi, Bluetooth
Optical driveNone

Connections, performance, and battery life

Built into the thin body you'll find a full-size USB 3.0 port, microSD card reader, and Mini DisplayPort, 5-megapixel and 1080p HD front- and rear-facing cameras, as well as stereo speakers with Dolby Audio-enhanced sound. Other hardware specs include SSD storage from 64GB to 512GB; 4GB or 8GB of memory; 802.11ac Wi-Fi; and TPM 2.0 for enterprise security.
There is also a $200/£165 Docking Station for Surface Pro 3 with a Mini DisplayPort supporting resolutions up to 3,840x2,600 pixels, five USB ports -- three USB 3.0 ports and two USB 2.0 ports -- and a Gigabit Ethernet jack. There is a standalone Surface Ethernet Adapter for $40, too.
No matter which configuration you order, you'll have to wait a while to get it (if you're looking just after Microsoft's announcement, which came on May 21, 2014). The two Intel Core i5 models, with 128GB ($999, £849) or 256GB ($1,299, £1,109) of SSD storage are listed as shipping in late June. The Core i3/64GB version ($799, £639) and the two Core i7 versions with 256GB ($1,549, £1,339) and 512GB ($1,949, £1,649) of SSD storage are all listed as shipping at the end of August.
Our fourth-gen Intel Core i5 CPU, coupled with 8GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD, matched up well with other premium laptops that might be considered in the same breath as the Surface Pro 3. Application performance was comparable with Apple's current 13-inch MacBook Air, the tablet-like Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro, and even last year's Surface Pro 2. For everyday Windows 8 tasks, from Photoshop to Web surfing, it's more than powerful enough, and the higher screen resolution makes it easier to snap multiple apps open at once on the screen.
Intel's basic built-in graphics still can't handle even mainstream games, so don't think of this as a portable game machine. We gave BioShock Infinite a spin at high settings and our standard 1,920x1,080-pixel resolution, and got single-digit frame rates. Running at the native resolution on low settings, the game still chugged unacceptably.
The Surface Pro 3 did, however, best most of the competition in battery life, even if only by a small margin. On our video playback battery drain test, it ran for 7 hours and 28 minutes, which is close to a full work day. The Yoga 2 Pro and HP's 13-inch two-in-one X2 hybrid fell only slightly behind, and last year's Surface Pro 2 ran for about 30 minutes less. Of course, as the introductory press conference for the Surface Pro 3 was built in part around comparisons to the MacBook Air, we should point out that the Air ran for more than 6 additional hours on that test.

Conclusion

Does the Surface Pro 3 really do something so different than its predecessors that it will replace the sea of glowing MacBook Airs seen in the audience during Microsoft's NYC launch event? No, it's still the same basic concept: a Core i-series slate, coupled with a very good keyboard accessory.
In the hand (or lap) shortcomings stood out, including some ergonomic difficulty actually balancing the thing on your lap, and a touchpad that still doesn't work effortlessly. It's certainly different enough from the Surface Pro 2, though, that I can call this a very substantial generation-over-generation leap.
Putting on-paper specs aside, it's already become my go-to coffee shop companion over the past few days, and I'd feel confident taking it on a plane ride or day full of on-the-go meetings. But I'm not quite ready to trade in my laptop just yet.HANDBRAKE MULTIMEDIA MULTITASKING TEST

HP Spectre 13 x2
715
Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (2013)
532
Microsoft Surface Pro 3
523
Microsoft Surface Pro 2
475
Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga 2 Pro
391
NOTE: Shorter bars indicate better performance
ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS5 IMAGE-PROCESSING TEST

HP Spectre 13 X2
334
Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (2013)
333
Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga 2 Pro
302
Microsoft Surface Pro 2
275
Microsoft Surface Pro 3
236
NOTE: Shorter bars indicate better performance
APPLE ITUNES ENCODING TEST

HP Spectre 13 X2
157
Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga 2 Pro
121
Microsoft Surface Pro 2
119
Microsoft Surface Pro 3
108
Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (2013)
82
NOTE: Shorter bars indicate better performance
VIDEO PLAYBACK BATTERY DRAIN TEST

Microsoft Surface Pro 2
415
Lenovo IdeaPad Yoga 2 Pro
430
HP Spectre 13 X2
435
Microsoft Surface Pro 3
448
Apple MacBook Air 13-inch (2013)
865
NOTE: Longer bars indicate better performance
WHAT YOU'LL PAY

MSRP:
$799.00
LOW PRICE:
$744.95
AVERAGE PRICE:
$780.98
Amazon Marketplace
$744.95
Microsoft Store
$799.00
Amazon.com
$799.00
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Tuesday 10 March 2015

Apple's new fanless MacBook thinnest ever with 12-inch Retina Display, redesigned trackpad and keyboard, starts at $1,299, ships April 10 (hands-on)

  • macbook2015-6619.jpg
Mac that Apple has ever made: at its thickest point it's just 13.1mm (about half an inch), 24 percent thinner than the existing 11-inch MacBook Air. It's also the lightest at 2 pounds (0.9 kg).
Making the laptop this thin required complete redesigns of just about every component, including the keyboard, trackpad and battery.
The keyboard, for example, uses a new butterfly mechanism for keys. It uses a single assembly that's four times more stable than a traditional scissor mechanism, while being 40 percent thinner. Apple says the keyboard is shallower, but with a larger face for each key. The backlight has a light for each key, which is nice -- backlit keyboards sometimes blow you out in low light.
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Alarm.com launches an Apple Watch extension to manage security at a glance

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Alarm.com
Alarm.com is jumping on the WatchKit bandwagon early. And it got a featured demo at Apple's Spring Forward Event today, where Apple VP Kevin Lynch used the new Alarm.com app extension for theApple Watch to remotely open his garage door. He was even able to use the Watch's screen to watch it happen in real time.
Alarm.com's subscription based security and smart home service has long featured an iOS app. After talking with Alarm.com's chief product officer, Dan Kerzner, we learned a bit more. The new, Watch-specific extension of that app will allow full control of all of your Alarm.com devices and feature functionality specifically designed for at a glance convenience.

Unique Functionality

The added functionality, appropriately called "Glances" also received a demo. With a swipe, you'll be able to view a summary of your home's status, including your garage door, your connected locks, your security system and even your lights. Open the app, and you'll get the full suite of Alarm.com controls, so you can manage and customize each of your compatible devices.
house.jpg
alarm.com
Of course, in order to make the Alarm.com app worthwhile, you'll need an Alarm.com system. The subscription-based, contractor-installed service offers a number of package tiers. Alarm.com offers options including the lights, locks, and garage doors mentioned above, as well as smart thermostats and cameras. You'll need the latter to be able to get the live view employed by Mr. Lynch today.

Viewing your smart home

At launch, you'll only be able to associate a camera to your garage door for a quick view, Kerzner told us. If you want to lock the front door and take a glance at it during the process, you'll need to access two separate devices in the app instead of viewing them together as in the garage door demo.
Kerzner also said Alarm.com intends to expand this linked functionality to the rest of its devices. Hopefully, you'll be able to pull up a picture of any door as you remotely control its lock, or any area in the home as you manipulate the lights. It would certainly make for a simpler interface ideal for the smaller format of a wearable.

Customized Features

All Alarm.com devices can be purchased now on the Alarm.com site. Once you've bought into the system, you can add more devices a la carte. Kerzner expects the watch extension to be fully up and running by the time the Apple Watch ships on April 24th.
Rounding out the new wrist-based security controls offered by Alarm.com are actionable notifications. The app uses your phone for geofencing, so if you leave home and forget to close your garage door or lock up, your watch will let you know. You can fix the situation from that screen without opening the app.

Missing HomeKit

Noticeably missing from either the demonstration during the Apple Event or the Alarm.com page for the new Apple Watch extension is any mention of HomeKit. Apple has been quiet about it's software for unifying the smart home since it was announced last June. Kerzner referred to his company's app as "WatchKit"-based, referring to Apple's Apple Watch-specific software development kit. He wouldn't go on the record as to whether it was also a HomeKit-based app, although Alarm.com has not yet been announced as an official Apple HomeKit partner.
Assuming Alarm.com's app does not integrate with HomeKit (and yes, it's possible for an app to be both HomeKit and WatchKit-based), and the Apple smart home ecosystem begins to look rather confusing for consumers. The Alarm.com app also looks less feature-rich. Kerzner did confirm that the Alarm.com Watch app will not have any kind of voice command support. Siri-based voice input is a highlight feature for apps that are a member of the HomeKit eco-system. (we saw a handful of HomeKit compatible devices during this January's CES).
An Alarm.com representative did say that the company will be supporting HomeKit in the future, but if Alarm.com's app isn't HomeKit-compatible, the quick button presses that opened the garage and seemed so cool today might feel dated when people can talk to their wrist to do the same thing.

Outlook

Given the increasing amount of DIY smart home security, Alarm.com looks smart to have this specific watch functionality ready to go so early. Once Apple flips the switch on HomeKit, and depending on how well other smart home apps extend their controls to the Apple Watch, I'll be interested to see how Alarm.com keeps this advantage
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