Final Words

The Surface Book 3 delivers a solid refresh to Microsoft's detachable laptop family, offering more of almost everything. There is more performance thanks to the new Core i7-1065G7 and GeForce GTX 1660 Ti. There is more RAM thanks to the switch to LPDDR4X. The new 10 nm processor provides better battery life. The Wi-Fi is much improved thanks to the new Intel AX201 Wi-Fi 6 adapter. Even the USB ports got an upgrade to USB 3.2 Gen 2, while the Surface Connect port now offers the same 3.2 Gen 2 speeds along with DisplayPort 1.4 for dual-UHD external monitor support. If you loved the idea of the Surface Book 2 but thought it was a bit long in the tooth or otherwise underpowered, the new Surface Book 3 delivers all of the upgrades needed to keep it a proper current generation notebook.

Surface devices have always offered a great build quality, and the Surface Book 3 continues that legacy with its magnesium alloy chassis. Microsoft has improved the undocking mechanism to make it faster, and improvements to DirectX 12 mean that the system is finally able to automatically migrate active workloads from the discrete GPU to the integrated one when detaching, at least as long as the active application supports this.

The Surface Book 3, like the Surface Book 2, offers one of the best typing experiences on any notebook, and couples it with one of the best trackpads around. The display is still identical to the outgoing model, but that display is also one of the best available on a notebook, so it is hard to fault them for keeping it.

Microsoft still includes 1080p video recording support, with a 5 MP front facing camera and 8 MP rear facing camera, and coupled with the dual far-field microphones makes the Surface Book 3 an ideal, if somewhat overpowered, video conferencing device.

There is no denying that the upgrades have worked well. If there was a complaint, it would be that this is now the third generation of more or less the same design, and while a design that is still impressive, it also is showing its age. The large display bezels, while partially required due to the convertible nature of the Surface Book, stand out in a premium device in 2020. The lack of Thunderbolt 3 support is also an increasingly glaring omission when all of their competitors offer it. It took Microsoft a long time to adopt USB Type-C for reasons only they seem to understand, and while it is nice to finally have that, a universal docking solution over Thunderbolt 3 would serve them well.

The Surface Book 3 still does fulfill its role though as a very powerful laptop, built with premium materials, and offering some unique features. The upgrades for 2020 were necessary to keep the design relevant, even if is relatively unchanged on the outside. The new configuration options, especially the ability to purchase it with 32 GB of RAM, opens up the device to those who need a lot of RAM for their workflows, and being able to purchase it with Quadro RTX also opens the door to some new mobile workstation use cases. Surface Book is never going to be the sales leader in the Surface lineup, mostly due to the price, but there is no denying that it is still one of the best notebooks on the market.

 
Wireless, Audio, Thermals, and Software
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  • jeremyshaw - Wednesday, June 3, 2020 - link

    Does Marvell even make wifi chips anymore? I thought they sold off that product line, and good riddance, too. Those were always garbage. I'd take a single channel Realtek 802.11n solution over any Marvell Armada,.
  • Whiteknight2020 - Wednesday, June 3, 2020 - link

    Oddly, most people don't have to work in those sorts of temps.
  • vol.2 - Wednesday, June 3, 2020 - link

    Is this still using the PLS display technology?
  • grant3 - Wednesday, June 3, 2020 - link

    Premium device, premium price, and no Thunderbolt.

    Why? because a Micrososft executive was scared about thunderbolt being a vector for malware. Even though -Microsoft itself- has long ago patched that vulnerability in windows.

    Astoundingly schizophrenic product line. Even Apple is was capable of loading up their laptops with TB ports years ago.
  • Deicidium369 - Thursday, June 4, 2020 - link

    I don't think TB - outside of Apple - has much penetration in the market. There are some nice disk arrays that connect thru TB - those are platform agnostic... Think about FireWire - industry standard - pretty much Apple only.
  • Retycint - Thursday, June 4, 2020 - link

    Lots of people use TB docks at their workplace. It's most definitely not niche
  • lmcd - Thursday, June 4, 2020 - link

    Mostly because Dell standardized on TB3 as a way to deliver multiple monitor output over one connector.
  • Deicidium369 - Friday, June 5, 2020 - link

    not necessarily niche on the PC side - I confess other than the Dell 13 2-in-1s i don't own anything that is TB - looked into the docking stations - wouldn't really serve a useful purpose for me. I have been out of corp IT for quite a while now.
  • vol.2 - Thursday, June 4, 2020 - link

    that was my understanding as well. why bother?
  • grant3 - Saturday, June 6, 2020 - link

    "I don't think TB - outside of Apple - has much penetration in the market."

    That point is arguable, but regardless, thunderbolt has only upside and now downside from a usability perspective.
    Now that TB has been royalty-free for a few years, there's no excuse not to include it on basically every laptop.
    I hate on Apple as much as anyone, but at least we can give them credit for pushing USB forward and now pushing TB3 forward, to the benefit of everyone.

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