If we learned anything from last year’s Surface Book 3, it’s that Microsoft’s wild detachable tablet design wasn’t long for this world. There was just no way to compete with other powerful notebooks when it required shoving full Windows PC, complete with a power-hungry CPU, into a large slate. Enter the Surface Laptop Studio, a new stab at building a powerful Surface notebook.
While it looks like a typical PC at first, a unique hinge allows you to pull the screen forward over the keyboard. And if you pull it all the way down, it turns into an easel, like a miniaturized version of the Surface Studio all-in-one. While I’m sure some Microsoft fans may miss the sheer weirdness of the Surface Book’s design, the Laptop Studio is clearly more functional for typical users. I’ve yet to meet any Surface Book owners who actually use it in tablet mode very often — even flipping the screen around becomes a chore eventually.
The Laptop Studio clearly has plenty of quirks of its own, too. Its lower half almost looks like two PCs stacked on top of each other, with an odd tiered design. And if its screen flexibility looks familiar, it may be because it takes a few cues from HP’s leather-clad Folio. That PC also let you pull out the screen and turn it into a tablet. It’s a design I’m surprised more computer makers haven’t adopted, as it seems more genuinely useful than convertibles with screens that fold a full 360-degrees.
Developing…
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