The screen jumps to 12 inches this time around, from the 10.6-in display in all of the older Surfaces. That's 38 percent more screen real estate in the new model. At first, this made for a strange tablet experience. It's so big, it's kinda like ripping the screen off of a MacBook Air and using it as a ginormous new tablet. But after getting used to it, I now appreciate the extra real estate. It's especially nice for web pages and image-rich apps like Flipboard.
The 12-in screen size works surprisingly well, but another big key is the Surface's new aspect ratio. Older Surfaces had an elongated 16:9 ratio, but the new model shifts to a less oblong 3:2. What this means is that the new model is finally usable in portrait mode. Of course you could use the older Surfaces upright, but I found them to be too ... vertical-looking. It was like holding a long scroll of parchment, or looking at a webpage through the silhouette of a tall building. Now it's a bit closer to the shape you'd get from an iPad's screen.
The biggest thing pushing the Surface Pro 3 in the "better tablet" direction, though, is that light and thin build. Despite having a much larger face, the Pro 3 is 12 percent lighter than the older Surface Pros. Just let that sink in for a second: this new model has a 23 percent larger face, but weighs 12 percent less. What that adds up to is a tablet that feels much better in hand. Sure, it might be the biggest damn tablet you've ever held, but having spent many hours with all three of the Surface Pros, there's no question that I'll take this huge face with a light and thin build over a standard-sized face with a chunky build.
Speaking of build, we're still looking at the same magnesium exterior that we've seen in every previous Surface. I thought Surfaces always had this part down pat, with a metallic look that has a premium aura – but without looking like yet another MacBook or iPad clone. There is one big difference, though, as the new model is silver-colored, rather than black. Black is a slimming color, and now that we have a fit and trim Surface Pro (it's just 9.1 mm thick), I guess Microsoft decided it didn't need that optical illusion after all.
Okay, so the Surface Pro 3 is much improved as a tablet. But what about as a laptop? Well, I always thought laptop mode was where the older Surface Pros excelled, but the new model takes this to a new level. The biggest difference is, again, that screen size. At 10.6 inches, the older Surfaces were sized more like netbooks than full-blown laptops. But the Surface Pro 3's 12-in screen has it straddling the fence between the two MacBook Air screen sizes. The Pro 3's 12-in display might make for a big-ass tablet, but it's damn near ideal for a laptop.
Of course, like all Surfaces, laptop mode is only made possible by a snap-on Surface keyboard cover accessory (which is, as before, sold separately). This time Microsoft is making your decision very easy, though, by only offering one style of cover for the Pro 3. The "Type Cover for Surface Pro 3" is almostlike the Type Cover 2 – only bigger. That includes those great moving (and backlit) keys with a snappy and responsive feel to them.
The pen's functionality isn't dramatically changed, but there are a few tricks up its sleeve this time. First, instead of having just one (right-click) button on its side, it now has two working buttons on the side and another on top. The second side button is for erasing in Microsoft's OneNote app, while the top button will open OneNote with one click – even if your Surface is asleep. I haven't traditionally been much of a OneNote user, but this tight integration has been reason enough to move some of my notes over from Evernote. Something tells me that's exactly what Microsoft had in mind here.
Evernote-killing tactics aside, the Surface's OneNote experience is terrific. With any mobile device, notes are one of the few things that you'll need to get to quickly. On most phones or tablets, you have to tap the power button, swipe on your lock screen, find the note app, open it and then tap out your note. That can end up turning into a 10-15 second process before you even start typing. On the Surface Pro 3, you just click the "cap" of the Surface Pen and bam: OneNote opens, ready for your note. If you're already using the Surface, it opens in less than a second. If your Surface is sleeping, then the process takes about three seconds. Either way, it's quick enough that you won't get the chance to forget your thought before you start scratching it down.
Once you're in OneNote, the digital penmanship is outstanding. I'm not sure if it's because Microsoft switched from Wacom to N-Trig for the underlying technology, or if it's something else going on in Windows, but the end result is the best digital ink experience I've seen on a tablet. It's so immediate and responsive, it's easy to forget that you aren't sketching with ink on paper. If developers get serious about the Surface Pro 3's pen capabilities, I can see this quickly becoming a go-to device for professional artists. It's that good.
Elsewhere the new Surface Pen works like it did on the older Surfaces. It gives you a precision that your fat fingers can't possibly provide, while still giving you some of the tactile intimacy that touchscreens are famous for. It's great for selecting text, working in Photoshop or controlling the cursor in desktop apps.
There's still no slot in which you can stash the Surface Pen when you aren't using it – and with a heavier aluminum pen this time, that's no surprise. But you can conveniently snap the pen (magnetically) onto the right side of the Surface, where the charging port is. The only time that doesn't work is when you're using the Surface and charging it at the same time: then you'll have to find somewhere else to stash the pen. The Type Cover does include a small attachable loop that you can slide the pen into (above), and it's a solid enough option (apart from having to jiggle the pen a bit to get it in or out).
Speaking of charging, the Surface Pro 3 is logging much better battery life than I had expected. There's usually enough juice for me to get through a full workday – and considering I often have it up and running for 12 hours or more, with at least a couple of those hours spent in Photoshop, that's no small feat. And in our standard battery test, where we stream video with brightness set at 75 percent, it lasted 6 hours and 26 minutes. For a "real" PC that runs full Windows, that's excellent. It's also 101 percent longer than the Surface Pro 2 lasted in the same test. This terrific battery life was the biggest thing that surprised me about the Pro 3.
When Microsoft unveiled the first Surface (just two years ago), Steve Ballmer and Co. laid it on thick with the catchphrase "no compromises." Who thought of this? Someone in marketing that wanted to frame the device's biggest weakness as a strength? It's a little baffling, because the first Surfaces were all about compromises. That didn't make them terrible machines, but any time you splice two separate product categories together, of course you're going to have some big sacrifices.
We weren't as hard on the older Surface Pros as some critics were. I thought they each marked important evolutions in an emerging product category, and were solid choices at the time for many customers. But the Surface Pro 3 is the brand's real coming out party. This is one bad-ass machine that cutsway down on the compromise.
The Surface Pro 3 isn't a "no compromises" machine either, but it's a hell of a lot closer. It makes for a huge tablet, but it's also very light and thin for its size (and it's remarkably light and thin for a full-fledged Windows PC). Its touch-based app selection is still playing catchup to other platforms, but you also have desktop and web apps to help fill that hole. And laptop mode is where it requires the least compromise, with a great screen size and resolution, an improved keyboard and touchpad, and that terrific stylus.
The Surface (and Windows 8 as a whole) got off to a rocky start, but I think Microsoft is going to start converting some true believers. The Surface Pro 3 can serve as both tablet and laptop for more people than ever. Apart from the always bizarre transition from OS X to Windows, I haven't had any problem switching from a Retina MacBook Pro to the Surface Pro 3 for this review. And I like the new Surface enough that I might actually stick with it as my main work and play machine.
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