Digitizer tablets for grad school

Because Racecar

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Looking to get a digitizer equipped tablet for grad school, mechanical engineering, mostly to take notes and occasionally run a small MATLAB/Octave simulation here or there. I have a i7 laptop for more intensive calculations, but i can't write notes on it. Thinking of getting a Surface 3, but also looking for alternatives and user's opinions of alternatives.

Thoughts? Thanks!!
 

smoheath

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I used a surface pro 3 i5 128 gb for my masters degree in aeronautical engineering. I used the surface pen for all my class notes. My main programs were solidworks, matlab, excel, word. That was all I took to school everyday and it was fantastic. So if you have the money, I'd just get the pro 3 or 4. That way you don't ever have to carry the tablet ish pc (surface 3) and your i7 laptop. Not to mention that the 12" screen of the pro is the worth it. Honestly, If i were to do it again, I'd buy the surface book just because it may be the best of both worlds in terms of digitizer tablet and full fledged laptop. Just my thoughts.
 

Because Racecar

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Thanks. I was trying not to duplicate capability (essentially avoiding buying things twice) since my laptop is good for everything except taking notes on. But I'll certainly look into it.
 

Captain_Eric

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I agree with smoheath that a Surface Pro 3, or better yet a Pro 4, with a good processor is the better way to go, if you can afford it. Though I'm retired, I am a Mechanical Engineer too. I have a Surface Pro 3 i5. Haven't used a Surface 3, but I understand it is positioned more for data consumption than for data crunching, which I imagine you will need from time to time in Engineer School. But you can compare the specs Surface 3 to Pro 3 to Pro 4 yourself. Bottom line, the Surface products really are great devices that cover tablet, PC, and sketching / note taking needs. Full powered and thin! You might be better to buy an i5 or i7 Pro 3 or 4 and sell your i7 on eBay. Then you carry solely one device. Good luck. Keep us posted.
 

Because Racecar

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I agree with smoheath that a Surface Pro 3, or better yet a Pro 4, with a good processor is the better way to go, if you can afford it. Though I'm retired, I am a Mechanical Engineer too. I have a Surface Pro 3 i5. Haven't used a Surface 3, but I understand it is positioned more for data consumption than for data crunching, which I imagine you will need from time to time in Engineer School. But you can compare the specs Surface 3 to Pro 3 to Pro 4 yourself. Bottom line, the Surface products really are great devices that cover tablet, PC, and sketching / note taking needs. Full powered and thin! You might be better to buy an i5 or i7 Pro 3 or 4 and sell your i7 on eBay. Then you carry solely one device. Good luck. Keep us posted.

I'll look into that. Costco has a pretty compelling deal on the SP3.
 

Because Racecar

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What I would think off the top of my head:

ASUS Vivotab Note 8 or Dell Venue 8 Pro
Surface 3

Does the Venue 8 pro have a digitizer layer? I have looked at the vivotab note, as well. Nowhere to actually go test it, though. Or pretty much any of these.

Anyone know anything about the Lenovo Thinkpad 10?
 

Because Racecar

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So given the price being the same, would you go for the Surface Pro 3 i5/8gb/256 or the Pro 4 i5/4gb/128? Performance on the 4 is supposed to reach about a 20% increase, but is that realistic when weighed against the increase in RAM and SSD?
 

Because Racecar

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I got to play with the S3 and SP3 and onenote at Best Buy. Unfortunately, there was no actual version of OneNote install, so I could not test the handwriting to text for formulas. Any experiences here?
 

baseballbert

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32 or 64 gb? I wonder if the 32 is to small to do anything with?

The 64gb with a 64gb MicroSD card. I didn't think 32gb would be enough after a Windows 10 install.

I tried a 128gb card, but it acted a little squirrelly.

It has a lot of upside, the only thing I'd like to see if there is another version:
128gb option
Higher resolution screen
Speakers with a little more oomph although headphones sound good

Other than, I like it quite a bit.

Very good quick productivity on the go companion device. If you get one, I'd also recommend the Asus Versa Sleeve. I've read too many things about the magnet cover cases hampering the stylus, but you don't have to worry about that with the Versa Sleeve.

I also got a Bluetooth mouse and keyboard when I need to get a little work done.
 

Because Racecar

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So if anyone is still listening, I think I'm going with the Surface Pro 3 i3 128 GB. Best Buy has it for $499 right now for college students. With some gift cards I have, I'll be out of pocket ~$150, which seems like a pretty good deal to me.
 

Captain_Eric

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So if anyone is still listening, I think I'm going with the Surface Pro 3 i3 128 GB. Best Buy has it for $499 right now for college students. With some gift cards I have, I'll be out of pocket ~$150, which seems like a pretty good deal to me.

Good choice, a good price within budget. Make sure to get the new "Surface Pro 4" keyboard and Pen. Both work on Pro 3 and the keyboards are the same size. Congratulations. Enjoy!

Edit in: If the track pad on the keyboard doesn't float your boat, buy yourself a Microsoft "arch" Bluetooth mouse. (I have a Pro 3 and understand the Pro 4 keyboard is better.) It's expensive, but if you're moving from class to class, it's collapses flat, so was to put in a sleeve.
 
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Because Racecar

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Good choice, a good price within budget. Make sure to get the new "Surface Pro 4" keyboard and Pen. Both work on Pro 3 and the keyboards are the same size. Congratulations. Enjoy!

Edit in: If the track pad on the keyboard doesn't float your boat, buy yourself a Microsoft "arch" Bluetooth mouse. (I have a Pro 3 and understand the Pro 4 keyboard is better.) It's expensive, but if you're moving from class to class, it's collapses flat, so was to put in a sleeve.

Awesome. I have the older version of the MS Arc, the red one that folds up. It's great, but needs a USB dongle installed to work. They have good quality items, so I'm hopeful.
 

Captain_Eric

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Awesome. I have the older version of the MS Arc, the red one that folds up. It's great, but needs a USB dongle installed to work. They have good quality items, so I'm hopeful.


Sounds good. But just FYI, the Arc mouse I'm talking about uses Bluetooth, so you don't use the USB dongle, which takes up the one USB port. Damn expensive though at over $50.
 

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