Surface Pro 3
-
I've had my surface pro3 for about a week now and I have to say it is one of my favorite devices I've ever had. I'm coming from a 2012 MacBook air and at first I thought that it might be hard to make the switch but I have to say I'm glad I did. So if you are thinking of making the switch to a SP3 I would recommend going for it.
-
Also, you can make the Surface Pro 3 run (Although not officially condoned) Mac OS, Android, and iOS.
-
@Mike-Ralston said:
Also, you can make the Surface Pro 3 run (Although not officially condoned) Mac OS, Android, and iOS.
How, two of those OSes are AMD64 architecture and two of them are Aand32. How are you getting Android or iOS onto an AMD64?
-
VM's. But you can effectively make it look like the VM built OS is the actual OS it's running on.
-
@Mike-Ralston said:
VM's. But you can effectively make it look like the VM built OS is the actual OS it's running on.
Emulation isn't the same at all as "running on." It's just an emulator. You can run anything anywhere if you include emulation. You can run mainframe OSes on desktops under emulation. Super slow and silly, but people do it. But you never say that you are running System Z on AMD64.
-
@lance said:
I've had my surface pro3 for about a week now and I have to say it is one of my favorite devices I've ever had. I'm coming from a 2012 MacBook air and at first I thought that it might be hard to make the switch but I have to say I'm glad I did. So if you are thinking of making the switch to a SP3 I would recommend going for it.
I have to say that I am loving mine. Every desktop game I've thrown at it plays well enough for my time and lifestyle...the new 3:2 ratio is fantastic for reading in portrait mode...it is fast, stable and just the perfect device. Of course, I used to say that about the original Surface Pro's but this is Surface Pro done RIGHT. Just wondering what the future of MODERN apps will be like.
-
@Mike-Ralston said:
Also, you can make the Surface Pro 3 run (Although not officially condoned) Mac OS, Android, and iOS.
I used to try to get "Hackintosh" working many years back and just gave up. How did you get it to run?
-
I hated windows 8 when it first came out and never really gave it a shot, but after using 8.1 on my surface it works great for being able to switch between using a keyboard and mouse with it and using it as a tablet.
-
I love 8.1 on my Surface and now am liking it more on my desktop as well.
-
@lance said:
I hated windows 8 when it first came out and never really gave it a shot, but after using 8.1 on my surface it works great for being able to switch between using a keyboard and mouse with it and using it as a tablet.
I love it now...though the news yesterday of the "rumors' of downplaying "Modern" are kind of alarming...though with the Surface considered a Hybrid device, it may be just fine...
-
@Minion-Queen said:
I love 8.1 on my Surface and now am liking it more on my desktop as well.
Agreed...it isn't so bad on the desktop if you can get past the schizophrenic nature of it. I use the start screen to, well, start everything...the only shortcut on my desktop is the Recycle Bin. I do have the Control Panel pinned to the task bar.
-
I right click the start button to get the control panel, I pin about 6 programs to the start bar, and the rest to the start screen.
-
@scottalanmiller The thing about the Surface Pro 3 though, is that it has enough Hardware muscle to effectively run a VM. Works very well, actually.
-
@Mike-Ralston said:
@scottalanmiller The thing about the Surface Pro 3 though, is that it has enough Hardware muscle to effectively run a VM. Works very well, actually.
It does...my preference is Hyper-V but I had to turn off some of its features to get connected standby to work...
http://winsupersite.com/mobile-devices/surface-pro-3-tip-hyper-v-vs-connected-standby
-
I just discovered NESBOX in the Windows store. It rocks for surface devices.
-
@lance said:
I just discovered NESBOX in the Windows store. It rocks for surface devices.
Thanks for the tip...will check it out. I was excited that there is an AutoCAD viewer now too (AutoCAD 360) but buggy and it is pre-release.
-
Some of our field service engineers use Netbooks. I've always quite liked them. They use them to connect to our hardware on customer sites to run diagnostics software. I'm wondering about replacing them with Surface Pros.
I have two concerns.
One is robustness. Netbooks were pretty robust and dirt cheap to replace if they did break. But we could put the Surfaces (or should that be Surfi?) in rugged cases.
Second is using them in confined spaces. It's pretty easy to find somewhere flatish to place a Netbook and type on it.
Whatdya think?
-
@Carnival-Boy said:
Some of our field service engineers use Netbooks. I've always quite liked them. They use them to connect to our hardware on customer sites to run diagnostics software. I'm wondering about replacing them with Surface Pros.
I have two concerns.
One is robustness. Netbooks were pretty robust and dirt cheap to replace if they did break. But we could put the Surfaces (or should that be Surfi?) in rugged cases.
Second is using them in confined spaces. It's pretty easy to find somewhere flatish to place a Netbook and type on it.
Whatdya think?
They are well built but have near zero reparability for even the most seasoned IT pro. They will be for sure heading to Microsoft for repair. As far as cases go, sleeves may be the way to go because of the stand, keyboard connector and fan vents.
The new stand/type cover combo DOES improve for use on laps and small places. Better on hard surfaces though.
-
I finally got one of these. Initial impressions are that I don't like it at all! It hasn't helped that I had four BSODs within the first hour. It's either faulty or there is an issue with my Live account (I suspect the later).
But mainly, I just don't like the format. For a tablet, it is really big and heavy. Whilst the specs look good, I hadn't factored in the size and weight of the keyboard. With the keyboard it is only marginally lighter and thinner than an ultrabook - 1.1kg versus 1.36kg for my Acer Aspire, for example.
I don't like that before you use it you have to flip the stand as well as open the keyboard, versus a laptop where you just lift the lid. OK, it's like an extra half-a-second, but it's an extra step.
I don't like that the keyboard will get scuffed really easily so you need a get a sleeve. That sleeve will add extra weight and size versus a laptop that I just chuck in my bag naked. Plus you'll then have to get it out of the sleeve before you use it, so that's another step.
We're currently buying HP Elitebook 820 G1 laptops and I'd choose one of these over a Surface every single time. Granted they're a little more expensive (but not much), and the screen isn't as good. But I find them so much more practical and I reckon they will prove far more robust so will easily justify the extra cost.
I just think it's too big to be a useful tablet. Oversized tablets suck. But using it with a keyboard just makes it a rubbish design compared with a clamshell. Clamshell computers are just a brilliant design - nothing beats them for robustness, comfort, aesthetics or practicality.
Ultrabooks FTW!
That said, if I got used to using the touchscreen features of Windows 8.1 maybe I'd learn to love it. The touchscreen interface is its only saving grace. I'll be taking it home this weekend and playing some games on it.
-
This has been my opnion of my Surface Pro2 as well. I have found it's great as a backup desktop with the dock that way I can connect a monitor keyboard and mouse, which completely defeats the whole purpose. IF you want a tablet get a tablet. If you want a laptop get a laptop the hybrid not so much.