- Feb 19, 2013
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SO, the real question now is, can the surface 2 replace your laptop? What do you guys think?
I only do browsing on internet and office on the computer.
I only do browsing on internet and office on the computer.
It certainly seems like it affects your typing.I'm typing this on a Surface 2, so believe me when I say NO.
It can outperform other tablets, but it is nowhere near as versatile, fast and useful as a decent x86/x64-system. You'll have slower performance, reudced usability in term of programs and browsing abilities, etc.
Probably depends what kind of server, but I've found I've always got access to a Remote Desktop, TeamViewer etc. machine running anything I can't do directly in RT. So for me, yes. I don't need a laptop for work any more.Yes, absolutely - with one caveat. You also need a desktop machine if you are doing anything server related
I think the people who bash the surface 2 has only 1 reason.
1. It lacks the more popular applications.
Those who complain about Win8 RT not being full windows 8.1., NEWSFLASH ios7 or 8 isn't OS X either. Yet, win 8RT does more.
You haven't used the Surface a lot if you haven't had problems yet. Are you on your Surface? Try attaching hyperlinks here in the touch-friendly browser interface. It can't do it. Try going over to a site like Corephotonics and browse around in either interface. It can't do it. Heck, try playing a casual game like Card Hunter for a second. Well, my Surface died. You also need a dedicated mouse(pad) since you can't hover over objects for tool tips.
So it can't even replace an x86-system in browsing. So face the simple fact; the Surface RT/2 is a good tablet, but it cannot and was never intended as a laptop-replacement.
As for "8RT does more", that's kind of goes against the whole "lacks the popular apps" statement. It can do streaming half-decently, its lacking in the browsing-experience and it won't give developers any SDK-access for even things like the battery. On the other hand, iOS has a robust application platform that Microsoft can only hope to rival once they merge RT and WP.
What surface do you have?
Well I must be delusional then I regularly use my Surface all day instead of a laptop/desktop.
For casual use and some writingSurface 2.
I can recommend it as a productivity tablet. Pretending it can replace an actual computer though is nothing short of delusional.
Like mrzees says, iOS is NOT OS X, yet these same people are not complaining that iOS is somehow deficient because of this. I just don't get it. Windows RT is much more productive than an iPad - it has a USB socket, is easy to print from, has a keyboard, has a better screen format, I could go on. There may be more apps for iOS but what are apps all about? On any other computer, including the Mac, you do most stuff in a browser, you don't need a specific app for everything you do. iOS is too disparate.
The Surface hardware is top-shelf and second to none, IMO. Absolutely no complaints. The only hardware-related complaint that I have is about the horrific touchpad on the TypeCover2.I initially bought the Surface Pro - mainly because friends and colleagues kept on about how RT wasn't full Windows and it was somehow brain dead. Do you know, I ended up installing not one single full Windows app. Like mrzees says, iOS is NOT OS X, yet these same people are not complaining that iOS is somehow deficient because of this. I just don't get it. Windows RT is much more productive than an iPad - it has a USB socket, is easy to print from, has a keyboard, has a better screen format, I could go on.
You appear to have a narrow definition of "apps". There is more to apps than simply app-ified versions of websites. That's an understandable misconception because it is the defense of Windows RT that is given the most often. MSIE on Windows RT does not support Java, nor does it support browser plug-ins. And with MSIE being the ONLY browser available for Windows RT, that makes it somewhat limiting.There may be more apps for iOS but what are apps all about? On any other computer, including the Mac, you do most stuff in a browser, you don't need a specific app for everything you do. iOS is too disparate.
The Surface hardware is top-shelf and second to none, IMO. Absolutely no complaints. The only hardware-related complaint that I have is about the horrific touchpad on the TypeCover2.
The iOS ecosystem contains a large quantity of high quality apps (yes, there are plenty of duds too). Everything that I need to do on a desktop computer, there is an app available for my iPad 4 (Not that I would want to do all those things on the iPad). The software is simply there. Software like Garageband, Boss Jock Studio, MS Office, Notesy, etc. Project management, genealogical research, no matter what the interest I have, there's an iOS app for it.
You appear to have a narrow definition of "apps". There is more to apps than simply app-ified versions of websites. That's an understandable misconception because it is the defense of Windows RT that is given the most often. MSIE on Windows RT does not support Java, nor does it support browser plug-ins. And with MSIE being the ONLY browser available for Windows RT, that makes it somewhat limiting.
The chronic lack of quality apps is the one thing that prevents the Surface 2 from being an "iPad killer". I'm a fan of the Surface RT/2... but a frustrated fan.
I don't do most stuff in a browser. If I did, a Surface would be inferior to a Chromebook.