anon(5445874)
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- Dec 6, 2012
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The answer is YES. I have one and it does everything a laptop can do and more. Fresh Pant, Photoshop, Video Editing, 3D modeling, the SP and SP2 does it all.
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.
If you don't need a lot of extra raw power to work on very heavy stuff (like 4K Video Editing, AutoCAD, 3D Modeling and similar), the answer is: Yes.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.
The question was not for the Pro version but for RT.
That would require: A) a second system B) constantly left on and C) accessible via the networkIf you need to use desktop apps, just use splashtop or teamviewer.
I use Cinema 4D, Photoshop, Premiere Pro and many other '3rd party' programs on my pro/pro2 and it all works just fine. Sure I won't be dealing with files that require 16 gigs of ram, but most laptops don't really do that either.Definitely yes - only if you use it for office work (type, browse, send e-mail). Other than that no.
For others, they want to play PC games or use other 3rd party programs, which is impossible on the Surface 2.
I use Cinema 4D, Photoshop, Premiere Pro and many other '3rd party' programs on my pro/pro2 and it all works just fine. Sure I won't be dealing with files that require 16 gigs of ram, but most laptops don't really do that either.
Most people don't have the time to read every little detail. But one would assume if you're trying to replace a laptop you're getting a Pro. Either that or you're just a basic user who might as well settle for using only your smartphone as your pc.Wow I still couldn't believe people can't differentiate between a Surface 2 and Pro 2.
It's not every little detail, it's the title, in a large font size. And yes, OP states that he wants to use it only for browsing and office, so he's basic user. You don't want to type a whole length of essay or tabulate something on excel in a smartphone, don't you? Quite the dedication there.Most people don't have the time to read every little detail. But one would assume if you're trying to replace a laptop you're getting a Pro. Either that or you're just a basic user who might as well settle for using only your smartphone as your pc.
That would require: A) a second system B) constantly left on and C) accessible via the network
Tell me more about your home planet.I feel like most people have at least one PC sitting in their house, hell how about the laptop the Surface is replacing! As far as networks go, I really can't think of anywhere I could go that doesn't have WiFi. I feel like both of these hold true for 90% of us.
This crazy OP has actually typed up a few essays on his Lumia 620 lol. Exactly as pleasant as it soundsIt's not every little detail, it's the title, in a large font size. And yes, OP states that he wants to use it only for browsing and office, so he's basic user. You don't want to type a whole length of essay or tabulate something on excel in a smartphone, don't you? Quite the dedication there.