The Microsoft Surface Studio Review
by Brett Howse on January 20, 2017 8:00 AM EST- Posted in
- Desktop
- Microsoft
- Surface
- Surface Studio
Microsoft has only been in the PC system game for a few years now, but over the last couple of years they have made a lot of progress rather quickly. These days they have a solid foundation of products available, with the Surface Pro 4 being one of the best convertible tablets, the Surface Book being a very solid convertible laptop, and also the more specialized products like the Hololens, and Surface Hub. Going into their October 2016 event, the one missing piece of their PC product lineup was a desktop computer, but with the announcement and release of the Surface Studio, that particular gap has now been filled.
But the Surface Studio is not your typical desktop PC. Even at first glance, the sleek, beautiful lines are readily apparent, and once powered on, it is rare for anyone to first glimpse the 28.125-inch 4500x3000 display and not say “wow”. It’s not only the very high resolution, but also the 3:2 aspect ratio that is unheard of in this segment, that makes the display stand out as something unique.
Microsoft has become one of the superlative hardware manufacturers in only the short span of four years or so, and the Surface Studio is one of their finest designs yet. However, from the very first Surface RT, Microsoft always tries to add something different, but more importantly interesting, to their designs, and in the case of the Surface Studio, it is the zero-gravity hinge, which allows the all-in-one to be quickly and easily tilted back to a 20° angle, letting it be used as a huge, digital drafting table. Microsoft announced the Surface Studio at their October Windows event, where they also announced the next Windows 10 Update, called the Creator’s Update, and it is wonderful to see them building hardware to truly bring out the exclusive features of their software.
Packed into the base of the Surface Studio is a laptop-class computer, with three different models available now. The base model, coming in at $2999, features an Intel Core i5-6440HQ processor, 8 GB of memory, a 1 TB hybrid drive with a 64 GB SSD cache, and a NVIDIA GeForce GTX 965M GPU. The mid-level model, which costs $3499, bumps the CPU up to an Intel Core i7-6820HQ, doubles the RAM to 16 GB, and doubles the SSD cache to a PCIe 128 GB model, with the same 1 TB HDD and GTX 965M. The highest priced model, at $4199, is an Intel Core i7-6820HQ, 32 GB of RAM, a 2 TB hybrid drive with a 128 GB PCIe cache, and a NVIDIA GTX 980M GPU with 4 GB of memory.
Microsoft Surface Studio | ||||||
Base | Middle | Top (As Tested) | ||||
CPU | Intel Core i5-6440HQ Quad-Core, 2.6-3.5 GHz 6 MB Cache, 45W TDP, No Hyperthreading |
Intel Core i7-6820HQ Quad-Core, 2.7-3.6 GHz 8 MB Cache, 45W TDP, Hyperthreading |
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GPU | NVIDIA GTX 965M 1024 CUDA Cores 944 Mhz + Boost 2 GB GDDR5 128-bit memory |
NVIDIA GTX 980M 1536 CUDA Cores 1038 Mhz + Boost 4 GB GDDR5 256-bit memory |
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RAM | 8 GB DDR4 | 16 GB DDR4 | 32 GB DDR4 | |||
Storage | 1 TB Hybrid Drive 64 GB SATA SSD Cache / 1 TB SATA HDD |
1 TB Hybrid Drive 128 GB PCIe SSD Cache / 1 TB SATA HDD |
2 TB Hybrid Drive 128 GB PCIe SSD Cache / 2 TB SATA HDD |
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IO | 4 USB 3.0 ports - one high power port Full size SD Card Slot Headset Jack Xbox Wireless Connectivity DisplayPort |
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Display | 28.125-inch PixelSense Display 4500 x 3000 resolution 192 DPI sRGB, DCI-P3, P3 D65 color modes |
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Webcam | 5 MP Webcam Windows Hello Facial Recognition |
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Networking | Marvel AVASTAR 802.11ac Intel I219-LM Gigabit Ethernet |
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Price | $2,999 | $3,499 | $4,199 |
There was quite a bit of discussion at the time of the Surface Studio launch over the fact that it was equipped with older technology. Intel’s Kaby Lake quad-core parts just launched at CES this year, so Skylake quad-core CPUs were the latest generation available at launch. The Maxwell based graphics options chosen were not the latest generation mobile graphics from NVIDIA, with the GTX 965M and GTX 980M available in the Studio. The Pascal based GTX 1060 and GTX 1070 would have been much more powerful substitutes, but they are not pin-compatible drop-in components with the Maxwell GPUs in the Surface Studio, meaning a new board design and thermal considerations would have been necessary late in the design phase, and Microsoft appears to have been conservative here to avoid missing their launch window.
Microsoft has also been very conservative with their I/O choices, with four USB 3.0 Type-A ports on the back of the Studio, along with a SD card slot, and mini DisplayPort. As with the Surface Pro 4 and Surface Book, Microsoft has continued to provide only the older USB-A ports, and not even offer a single USB-C port, let alone with Thunderbolt. Anyone purchasing a Studio will likely be using it for several years, and the lack of USB-C is going to be an issue in the future, if not already today. The Surface team really needs to reconsider this as it is already a detriment to not include any.
There also must be some questions raised about the use of a hybrid drive in a PC of this price. We’ll dig in to the experience later, but Microsoft could and should offer a larger SSD as the boot disk, complimented by a HDD as a secondary disk, at least on the highest end model. A 512 GB NVMe SSD as the boot drive would appease much of the criticism. The computer does cost over $4000 after all, and while much of the cost of the device is in the display, SSDs have been the biggest improvement in user experience on the PC in a long time.
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Gigaplex - Wednesday, January 25, 2017 - link
That doesn't mean much unless you know how much stock they had.fallaha56 - Wednesday, January 25, 2017 - link
this is absolutely itwhat an idiotic idea to release this with anything less than cutting edge hardware
especially the HDD and GPU -MS muppets
Keao - Friday, January 20, 2017 - link
Well to have just one computer for both uses in case you're having a home office and want to unwind playing games every now and then.Also i concur with piroroadkill, I'd love to get the screen + hinge alone to be powered by my desktop unit :-3
tipoo - Friday, January 20, 2017 - link
If you buy a 4 grand machine for creative work, running a game on the side is just a bonus. No one is buying this as a dedicated gaming machine, of course.Gich - Friday, January 20, 2017 - link
Yes, so not really a point to make that it sucks at gaming.Devo2007 - Friday, January 20, 2017 - link
Except that for some reason it has a built in wireless adapter for the XBOX One controller. Can't even play some of the Play Anywhere games like Forza Horizon 3 or Gears of War at the best settings.jlabelle2 - Monday, January 23, 2017 - link
What are "best settings"? I am sure it can play Horizon 3 at 1080p like a XBox One or Battefield.It is an awesome little addition (the wireless controller built-in).
DanNeely - Friday, January 20, 2017 - link
Artists at game companies would be the most trivial example.lefty2 - Friday, January 20, 2017 - link
"Most people would use the pen with the same hand as they would use the mouse, and their non-dominant hand ends up not being utilized."This is not true if you are using photoshop. You have your left hand on the keyboard to quickly switch tools (i.e 'e' for erase, 'b' for brush, etc.)
BrokenCrayons - Friday, January 20, 2017 - link
I love your work Brett, but um..."Even at first glance, the sleek, beautiful lines are readily apparent..."
That's got cheesy written all over it. I know that it's good to help build mental images in the reader's mind when writing descriptively, but you're reviewing computer hardware here and not writing a romance novel. Besides that, you have pictures clearly showing a rectangular screen attached to a little box with an angular base. What exactly is sleek about it? It's blocky, industrial, and machine manufactured and Microsoft's designers didn't appear to make any attempt to hide that fact.