Surface Book

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Surface Book
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Developer Microsoft
Product family Microsoft Surface
Type 2-in-1 PC
Release date October 26, 2015 (2015-10-26)
Operating system Windows 10 Pro
CPU Intel Skylake dual-core processor:[1]
i5-6300U
2.4 up to 3.0 GHz, 3 MB cache, 15 W[2]
i7-6600U
2.6 up to 3.4 GHz, 4 MB cache, 15 W[3]
Memory 8 or 16 GB LPDDR3 RAM
Storage SSD: 128 GB, 256 GB, 512 GB, 1 TB
Removable storage Full-size SD card slot
(supports SDXC cards)
Display 13.5", 3000x2000 (267 PPI) LCD
Graphics Intel HD Graphics 520
Optional custom variant of Nvidia GeForce 940M GPU with 1 GB of memory[4][5] in keyboard part
Sound Stereo speakers, dual microphones, headset jack
Input Keyboard, touchpad mouse, stylus pen, sensors: accelerometer, gyroscope, magnetometer, ambient light
Camera 5.0 MP front, 8.0 MP rear 1080p HD video recording
Touchpad 5-point multi-touch
Connectivity 802.11a/b/g/n/ac Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.0, two USB 3.0 ports, Mini DisplayPort
Dimensions As a tablet: 12.3 by 8.67 by 0.3 inches (31.24 cm × 22.02 cm × 0.76 cm)
As a laptop: 12.3 by 9.14 by 0.9 inches (31.2 cm × 23.2 cm × 2.3 cm)
Weight As a tablet: 1.6 pounds (0.73 kg)
As a laptop: 3.34 pounds (1.51 kg)
Website Surface.com
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The Surface Book is a 2-in-1 PC designed and produced by Microsoft, part of the company's Surface line of personal computing devices. Surface Book is distinguished from other Surface devices primarily by its full-sized, detachable keyboard, which uses a dynamic fulcrum hinge that expands when it is opened. The keyboard contains a second battery, a number of ports and an optional discrete graphics card used when the screen part, also dubbed as the clipboard by Microsoft, is docked to it. Contrary to Surface Pro devices, which are marketed as tablets, the Surface Book is marketed as a laptop, Microsoft's first device marketed as such.

History

Surface Book was announced at the Windows 10 Devices Event by Microsoft at October 6, 2015, alongside the Surface Pro 4.[6] It was available for a pre-order the following day and was released and shipped to customers beginning on October 26, 2015.

When unveiling the Surface Book to the press, Panos Panay, corporate vice president for Surface Computing at Microsoft, initially presented the device as being a laptop (using part of a promotional video which shows the screen remaining attached to the keyboard base) and positioned it as a competitor to the MacBook Pro, before revealing its true nature as a hybrid device by showing the rest of the video where the screen is revealed as detachable and compatible with the Surface Pen.[7][8]

Features

Design

The Surface Book's design was influenced by a goal to design a 2-in-1 convertible tablet that could be folded like a laptop, and not require the keyboard to be heavier than the tablet portion in order to support and balance the tablet portion.[7] To reach this goal, the Surface development team developed a special hinge on the keyboard that would increase the footprint of the device when opened, thus maintaining the balance without increasing the weight differential between the two parts.[7][8] The hinge is accompanied by muscle wire locks that secure the tablet portion to the keyboard.[9] They are constructed from nickel titanium—an alloy that contracts when exposed to an electrical current; pressing a release button on the keyboard sends an electrical impulse through the wires that attach or release the clips.[7][8][10] The team also worked with the Microsoft team developing Windows 10 to implement a switchable graphics system, where the tablet would be able to switch to a discrete graphics card located within the keyboard when docked, and revert to internal graphics when undocked.[7][8]

The Surface Book's use cases are reflected by several design decisions, such as referring to the tablet portion as being a clipboard. Additionally, while the device as a whole is rated as having 12 hours of battery life, this capacity is divided between two separate batteries within the clipboard and keyboard portions: the clipboard has a 4-hour battery, while the base has 8-hour.[7][8] The Surface Book's keyboard is considered a major component of the device, and is bundled with all models.[11]

The device consists of a tablet portion with a 13.5 inches (34 cm), 3000x2000 resolution display,[1] and a keyboard attachment.[7] That allows it to function similarly to a traditional laptop. Both components are constructed from machined magnesium.[11][12] The Surface Book's keyboard utilizes a dynamic fulcrum hinge, which compresses when closed, and expands outwards when opened. The hinge design allows the tablet portion to be held up at an angle resembling a traditional laptop screen without the use of a kickstand, a supporting part found in Surface-series devices, and increases the physical room between the keyboard and the tablet.[10][13]

Hardware

Surface Book is a first-time Surface-family 2-in-1 to be shipped with a keyboard. Contrary to a Type Cover optional keyboard accessory of other Surface tablets, Surface Book's keyboard is a thick and sturdy part, capable of folding back behind the display. It contains two USB 3.0 ports, full-size SD card slot on the left, Mini DisplayPort and SurfaceConnect port on the right, has an integrated additional battery and an optional Nvidia discrete GPU with 1 GB of video memory.[11] It can be used for a non-demanding tasks such as a web browsing, without the connected keyboard part, and when the laptop convenience, extended connectivity, performance, and battery life are needed — with a keyboard attached.

The 2-in-1's display features the same 3:2 aspect ratio and 10-point multi-touch display, found in other Surface tablets starting from Surface Pro 3, but its size and resolution are significantly increased at 13.5 inches (34 cm) and 3000x2000 (267 PPI) respectively.[11]

Surface Book models are built with a 6th generation Skylake Intel Core i5 or i7 processors. The top CPU option, i7-6600U, has a clock rate of 2.6 GHz, with up to 3.4 GHz in Turbo Boost mode.[3]

There is an Intel HD Graphics 520 GPU available, integrated in all processor options, however it is possible to order a Surface Book with an additional custom variant of Nvidia GeForce 940M[4][5] Maxwell-architecture discrete GPU for the improved operation of GPU performance-demanding programs such as Adobe Premiere Pro.[14] During the presentation it was stated that the models with Nvidia GPU can comfortably run games with a performance footprint of League of Legends.[15] The Surface Book is able to connect and disconnect the discrete GPU automatically, on-the-fly and without an OS reboot needed, when user attaches and detaches the keyboard part.[1]

Two system memory options available are: 8 or 16 GB and four SSD options: 128, 256, 512, or 1024 GB, but the higher SSD option is not available in some countries.[11]

File:Surface Book Detach.jpg
Surface Book allowing the user to detach the notebook

Software

Surface Book models ship with a pre-installed 64-bit version of Windows 10 Pro and a 30-day trial Microsoft Office suite.[11]

Accessories

A Surface Dock was announced alongside the Surface Book and Surface Pro 4, and is compatible with both devices. It is also backward compatible with the Surface Pro 3. The Surface Dock adds two Mini DisplayPorts, one Gigabit Ethernet, four USB 3.0 and out audio out ports to the 2-in-1.[16]

Just like the Surface Pro devices, Surface Book includes a Surface Pen.[17] Surface Book ships with the latest version of the pen with 1024 levels of pressure. A Surface Pen Tip Kit is also available for order, which includes a set of pen tips of various diameter aimed for artists and illustrators.

Reception

Critical reception

Upon release the Surface Book received critical acclaim for its design and functionality, as well as its integration of a secondary GPU into the keyboard. However, the lack of certain features, such as LTE connectivity, USB Type-C ports, were noted, as well as the price of the highest model with 1 TB of storage and a Core i7 which is US$3,200.[1][18] In addition, many reviewers had pre-release issues with the hinge undocking mechanism and graphics display drivers, both of which Microsoft promised to resolve at a later date through a Windows software update.[19]

Timeline

Source: Microsoft Devices Blog

References

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  19. http://www.pcworld.com/article/2998893/tablet-pc/new-surface-book-owners-complain-of-unexpected-freezes-other-bugs.html

External links