Final Words

As a self-professed fan of the Surface Book series of notebooks, it is a bit sad to see that device family depart. They were completely unique in the laptop world, with a style all their own. But there is no doubt that the Surface Book had some quirks and usability issues that created some user friction, and which Microsoft has aimed to solve with the Surface Laptop Studio.

The good news is that Microsoft has indeed delivered a worthy successor to the Surface Book. The new design with its dynamic woven hinge provides almost all of the same functionality as the Surface Book did without any of the clumsiness of having to detach the display to change modes. The Surface Laptop Studio allows you to seamlessly transition from Laptop to Stage to Studio mode, all with a single hand. The design also gets the benefit of the stability of a traditional clamshell laptop, with the weight on the bottom, and does so with barely any extra bulk from the display hinge itself. The display is only marginally thicker than a comparable notebook. It really is a great solution.

The rounded corners of the Laptop Studio, which flow into the display, are a great design touch as well. It is a bit sad to see the magnesium-alloy used on previous Surface devices be supplanted with aluminum, but Microsoft nailed the texture of the aluminum making it feel the same as the Surface Book. Despite being quicker than the Surface Book 3, it is also significantly smaller, and slightly lighter as well.

The new 14.4-inch PixelSense Flow display is wonderful to use. The 120 Hz refresh makes everything incredibly smooth, but thanks to the automatic refresh rate control, it can lower the refresh to save power when the faster response is not needed. It does lose a bit of pixel density compared to the outgoing Surface Book, but the added response time makes up for it. And, as usual, the display is incredibly accurate in its color reproduction.

The new keyboard and haptic touchpad also take the Laptop Studio to that next level. The key feel is superb, improving on the already great keyboards in previous Surface devices. The new trackpad is large, but not too large, and the adjustable haptic feedback works seamlessly.

Pen input is also well-executed with the new Surface Slim Pen 2, which can dock to the underside of the step, and charge right off the laptop. The Studio mode makes for a great writing surface and is a wonderful pairing with the pen support.

The Surface Laptop Studio has everything going for it. The design is striking. The functionality is fantastic. The performance is excellent. Even the battery life is superb. Can there even be a downside? Yes of course there is, and it is the price.

The Surface Book was a very expensive computer, so it should be no surprise that the replacement is also very expensive. Starting at $1599.99 USD for the Core i5 / 16 GB / 256 GB model and topping out at $3099.00 for a Core i7 / RTX / 32 GB / 2 TB model, the Surface Laptop Studio is most definitely expensive. Whether or not it is worth it is always a personal or business decision. Microsoft has delivered a worthy successor to the Surface Book which integrates wonderfully with Windows 11. Do you need it? Likely not. Do you want it? Likely yes.

 
Wireless, Audio, Thermals, and Software
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  • blppt - Thursday, October 7, 2021 - link

    You think that's bad---my current Dell has on-chip Intel 620 and for some reason they also threw in the nearly useless MX130 from Nvidia as well. Talk about wasted silicon.
  • Awells62 - Friday, October 8, 2021 - link

    100% This is exactly why I canceled my order. Coming from my Surface Book 2 with a 1060... the 3050Ti isn't really that much of an upgrade, like an exceedingly minor upgrade compared to if they put a 3060 in there.
  • amschroeder55 - Tuesday, October 5, 2021 - link

    As a diehard lover of the SB lineup (still rocking that SB2 15 with 1060), I'm incredibly sad to see them go, particularly as it is finally feeling like good 15-25W cpu's are here/approaching to limit the need to go for a 35W (ala Zen 3 or otherwise), and honestly I think this folding hinge is a serious step back in ID, but I recognize it seemed inevitable when the gaps between models had been farther and farther apart.
  • lemurbutton - Tuesday, October 5, 2021 - link

    These laptops should be worse less than the M1 Macbook Air. At $1600 and $2,099.99, they're a joke.

    Wait for the M2X (A15-based) Macbook Pros coming out in a month.
  • lemurbutton - Tuesday, October 5, 2021 - link

    worse --> worth
  • Zeratul56 - Tuesday, October 5, 2021 - link

    The M1 is an impressive feat of cpu performance no doubt but to discount this computer on that alone is foolish.

    This offers a touch screen, pen input, optional internal graphics, and support for external graphics. It also has an articulating display in a form factor that is only 2 mm thicker than the Mac book pro.

    You can say you don’t want or need any of those features which is fine but to say it’s a slam dunk for a MacBook Air is stupid.

    Apple put out sub par cooling designs for their MacBook’s for year and now that the M1 exists suddenly every apple fanboy loves absolute cpu performance.
  • Byte - Tuesday, October 5, 2021 - link

    For now the Macbooks are glorified ipads with keyboards. They just throw away decades of programs. I may be a MS whore, but I do run iPhones only and iPads. I guess it is fitting Apple will just do their own thing and you have to go MS or Linux to do real work.
  • misan - Wednesday, October 6, 2021 - link

    This doesn't make any sense. No software has been thrown away (all old Intel apps works) and major stuff already natively works on ARM anyway. My entire dev and data science setup has been ARM native since early spring 2021.
  • Findecanor - Wednesday, October 6, 2021 - link

    Apple's CPUs have been more efficient/powerful than Intel's for years. It has taken this long for their software engineers to perfect x86-64 emulation.
    The M1 also employs a few unique tricks for making x86-64 emulation perform better.
  • gund8912 - Monday, October 11, 2021 - link

    Like what softwares/programs ?

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