Display

When Surface Pro 3 moved to a 3:2 aspect ratio, it made a lot of sense. 16:9 in a tablet makes for a very poor experience, and in a laptop, it is not much better. Almost everyone has moved to 16:9 in the laptop space and the lack of vertical height can make for a less than ideal experience. Most web content is vertical, and working in Office means you want vertical space as well. The widescreen does help with two windows snapped open at once, but I always find myself craving more vertical room.

On a tablet, I feel that 16:9 is even worse. Holding a 16:9 device in one hand can feel very heavy due to the length of the tablet, and turning it to portrait means that it is very tall and skinny. The move to 3:2 really squares up the device, and makes it a lot more balanced in either direction. Holding it in one hand is much easier, and finally portrait mode is usable on the Surface.

So the aspect ratio is a big improvement. The display size also has a slightly wider corner to corner of 10.8 inches versus 10.6 inch model that came before this. The actual width of the display is about 9 inches, compared to 9.2 on the outgoing Surface 2 model. The display height is now 6 inches, up from 5.2, so the total area of the display is almost 54 square inches, up from 48 inches on the outgoing model.

To fill this display, we have a Panasonic panel with a resolution of 1920x1280. This is roughly the same pixel density as the Surface Pro 3’s slightly larger 12 inch 2160x1440 display, coming in at 217 pixels per inch. It is not the highest PPI of a tablet, but it makes a good compromise between desktop and tablet use. Speaking of desktop use, I found that it makes a perfectly acceptable size for a small notebook, and even with touch it was not too difficult to work with the icons.

When Microsoft launched Surface 3, it said “with incredibly accurate colors and clarity from multiple viewing angles” and that would be excellent to see. The Surface Pro 3 has a decent display, but it was not the most accurate device we’ve tested.

To do our display testing, we use SpectraCal’s CalMAN 5 suite with a custom workflow. Brightness and contrast readings are taken with an X-Rite i1Display Pro colorimeter, and color accuracy is measured with an X-Rite i1Pro spectrophotometer. We target 200 nits brightness when doing our tests.

Brightness and Contrast

Display - Max Brightness

Display - Black Levels

Display - Contrast Ratio

The Surface 3 gets quite bright, coming in at 432 nits at maximum output. The black levels are a bit high, but overall contrast is a decent 920:1. This makes the Surface 3 almost 100 nits higher than the Surface Pro 3 that Anand reviewed last year, which is a good start for this less expensive version.

Grayscale

Display - Grayscale Accuracy

Display - White Point

The grayscale average for the Surface 3 is very good, coming in just about at 2.5 as an average for the sweep. There is a bit of a spike at 25% but it is not indicative of the overall calibration. Gamma is a bit low, but the white point is fairly close to the ideal value.

Saturation

Display - Saturation Accuracy

The accuracy on our saturation tests is outstanding, with an overall average score of just 1.57. Looking at the individual colors, the red is a bit oversaturated at 100%, and blue tends to be undersaturated, but the amount of error is very small.

Gamut and Gretag Macbeth

Display - Gamut Accuracy

Display - GMB Accuracy

Once again the Surface 3 comes in with fantastic scores on these two tests, with the comprehensive GMB test under 2. When we are doing these tests, values under 3 are considered good, and the Surface 3 has passed with amazing scores. The best part of this is that all of this is done without the use of an ICC profile, so that means the hardware is being calibrated directly. ICC profiles can fix some issues, but not all programs respect them so having it done in hardware is a much better option.

Calibrated

Since this is a full x86 Windows operating system, we can also calibrate the display with the CalMAN software. Even though it was very good out of the box, the calibration pulls it even closer to perfection.

Surface 3 has one of the most accurate displays we have ever tested, which is great to see in what is considered the value member of the Surface family. Microsoft promised an accurate display and they have delivered.

GPU and NAND Performance Battery Life
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  • nikon133 - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    Very inclined to finally replace my old ThinkPad Tablet 2 with Surface 3.

    Better battery life would be good, but close to 8 hours of tablet-mode browsing and video watching should do.

    In addition, I love how kickstand works on SP3 and it's presence - even in simplified form - makes big difference for me. Looking at scores, this might even be able to handle some light Lightroom work - the most demanding task I have for my laptop at present - so it could fully integrate my tablet and laptop needs, leaving me with tablet and desktop only. One device less to update, charge, maintain, buy in a first place - sounds good to me.
  • Novacius - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    In my opinion, it's too heavy compared to a iPad Air 2 or so. And it's too expensive: Its starts at 599€ in Germany, the Pro variant only costs 90€ more.
  • damianrobertjones - Wednesday, May 6, 2015 - link

    Then people moving from the Ipad 4 will be more than happy with the S3
  • kyuu - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    Thanks for the review, Brett. No more nagging from me. ;)

    The one thing I am missing is the Dolphin benchmark. Were you unable to run that?

    As far as the S3 itself goes; while I cancelled my preorder for it, I only did so because I was able to get a good deal on a Core i5 SP3 on ebay. For the price, it's still a lot more capable than a comparably priced iPad, and I wouldn't have been sorry to have it. And iPads still don't have a built-in way to prop themselves up, which I consider an indispensable feature nowadays. I am disappointed that the storage is a bit on the slow side given that we have some pretty fast eMMC (not to mention UFS) nowadays. And the battery life results are a bit worrisome.
  • metayoshi - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    Dolphin benchmark on this thing? Believe me when I say this, my old Core i7-860 couldn't run Dolphin that well, save for a very few select games, and it's one of the reasons I upgraded to a Core i7-4790K last September. The Atom x7-z8700 is nowhere near the performance of the Core i7-860, and much is closer to the Core 2 Duo SU-7300 that was in the Asus UL30Vt that I had around the same time I built my Core i7-860 in early 2010. There's no question, this thing will suck running the Dolphin benchmark.

    I'm actually getting a Surface 3 myself, but it's definitely not for running the Dolphin emulator.
  • NA1NSXR - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    This was the tablet I was waiting for, except it isn't. The choice of Atom over Core M is unacceptable to me, so as hard it was to wait for an iPad-sized device to bring full Windows, I will have to pass.
  • kyuu - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    If this had Core M, the price would barely be less than a Surface Pro.
  • damianrobertjones - Wednesday, May 6, 2015 - link

    Core m? You do know that the Lenovo Yoga devices, with Core M, have a fan! You might as well just go for the Pro 3.
  • zodiacfml - Tuesday, May 5, 2015 - link

    Nice, but its kinda bit late considering laptops based on the Core M have been getting thinner and quite reasonable in cost especially the Asus.

    Or is it just pricing, for the price without the keyboard it is pricey even with the good display.

    I can only see this good for business or work where a tablet is being used for business/company software.
  • meacupla - Tuesday, May 5, 2015 - link

    There's really one big difference between microsoft and asus.

    Microsoft will replace your product with little questions if you are dissatisfied with it, or it's really broken.

    Asus will take you on a wild goose chase, if they ever admit there is something wrong with their product.

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