Saturday, April 30, 2016

Microsoft Surface Pro 4 Review


The Pros
Best Type Cover yet; Bright Pixel Sense display; More sensitive stylus with eraser; Speedy SSD and 6th-gen Intel CPU
The Cons
Below-average battery life; Pricey (especially for Core i7 models); Glitchy rear camera
Verdict
While it might not look new on the outside, the Surface Pro 4 features a faster CPU, bright high-res screen and improved Type Cover but with much less battery life.

battery life.

Tests notebook graphics performance.

Microsoft Surface Pro 4
Apple MacBook Air (13-inch, early 2015)
HP Spectre x360 13t
Toshiba Satellite Radius 12
Category Average (as of 01/31/16)
843
Not Tested
710
1080p
798
4K
841
601.23
 0
 160
 320
 480
 640
 800
 960
  • 3DMark Fire Strike3DMark Fire Strike
  • Battery LifeBattery Life
  • Color AccuracyColor Accuracy
  • Display Brightness (Nits)Display Brightness (Nits)
  • Gamut VolumeGamut Volume
  • Graphics Performance (3DMark)Graphics Performance (3DMark)
  • Hard Drive SpeedHard Drive Speed
  • Overall Performance (Geekbench 3)Overall Performance (Geekbench 3)
  • Spreadsheet PerformanceSpreadsheet Performance
  • World of Warcraft (autodetect, 13x7)World of Warcraft (autodetect, 13x7)
 
While there are still a lot of traditional notebooks that Microsoft's tablet/laptop hybrid hasn't yet killed, the Surface Pro 3 changed the landscape of mobile computing. Now, the likes of HP,Lenovo, Dell and even Apple are chasing Microsoft's coattails with their own all-purpose devices. But before those machines can hit the shelves, here comes the Surface Pro 4.
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Editors' Note: We initially rated the Surface Pro 4 3 stars partly because we tested a number of review units equipped with defective cameras. However, in the three months since its release, we continued to test updated models and retail versions and  have not encountered the same issue. As such, we feel confident in raising the score to 3.5 stars.
The SP4 (starting at $899, and $1,429 as reviewed) plays it safe with an exterior design that's almost exactly the same as the old one. The big changes come in the stunning 12.3-inch PixelSense display, more sensitive stylus, new 6th-gen Intel processors, and wider range of memory and storage options. This makes the SP4 faster and more useful than any Surface ever before. But with the new competition, including the even-sexier Surface Book, is the Surface Pro 4 still the best hybrid device on the market?

Design: Some things stay the same


Unless you pull out your magnifying glass, the Surface Pro 4 looks nearly identical to last year's model, although that's not really a bad thing. The magnesium body feels solid, as does the friction-hinged kickstand, which rotates back with a stiff but secure-feeling action. There's a thin vent that runs part of the way around the edge to help cool the system and a new, shiny Microsoft badge on the back. The angled edges are sharp without being painful, and, as before, the Type Cover flips around and lies flat against the back when you put the device in tablet mode.

The SP4 is a bit larger than the SP3, at 11.50 x 7.93-inches versus 11.45 x 7.8 for last year's model. But it makes up for that increased size with reduced weight and thickness, at 1.73-pounds and just 0.33-inches thick (1.76 pounds and 0.36-inches for the SP3). When you add on the Type Cover, the full dimensions are 11.50 x 7.93 x 0.43-inches and 2.37 pounds.
Compared to more-traditional notebooks and 2-in-1s, the SP4 is smaller. HP's 13-inch Spectre x360 13t and Toshiba's Satellite Radius 12 are both bigger and heavier, at 12.79 x 8.6 x 0.6 and 3.26 pounds and 11.8 x 8.2 x 0.61 and 2.9 pounds, respectively. Even the svelte Macbook Air seems portly, at 12.8 x 8.9 x 0.11-0.68 inches and 2.96 pounds. 

Stylus: More sensitivity and a better feel


The new eraser on the Surface Pro 4's stylus is a simple improvement with a big impact. You can still push it down to open OneNote, but when you actually get to writing, the eraser makes it easier and more natural to fix a stray stroke or errant effort.

The sensitivity has also been upped to 1024 levels of pressure (versus 256 for the old model), a big improvement for the artistically inclined. And with the new $10 Pen tip kit, you can switch out the nib to suit your needs. I particularly enjoyed the HB tip, which feels a lot like a traditional pencil, right down to the smooth-but-not-quite-slippery resistance.

Type Cover: A little spacing makes a big difference


Previously, when I recommended either the Surface 3 or Surface Pro 3, I had to mention that people should try the keyboard before buying to make sure they would like it. But with the Surface Pro 4, that caveat is a thing of the past. 
What many people may not have realized is that previous versions of Microsoft's Type Cover (both for Surface 3 and Surface 3 Pro) had oversized 14 x 14mm keys that were bigger than what you'd get on a typical laptop or desktop keyboard. The problem was that the old layout had almost no space among the keys, which made it easy to hit multiple keys at the same time resulting in unnecessary typos. So for the Surface Pro 4, Microsoft has reduced the keys to a standard 12 x 12mm size and switched over to a more well-spaced, chiclet-style layout, which is much more comfortable for typing.
When you add in longer key travel (1.4mm for the SP4 versus 1mm for SP3), a heavier actuation weight (59 grams for SP4, 50 grams for SP3) and the same bright backlighting, I can say with confidence that this is the best Surface keyboard Microsoft has ever made.

However, the Surface Pro 4 is still a little awkward to use in your lap due to its unusual balance and thin rear kickstand.
The reduced key size makes for more real estate below the keyboard, which let Microsoft expand the touchpad to 4 x 2-inches on the Surface Pro 4, up from 3.5 x 1.7-inches on the Surface Pro 3. That means there's now even more room to luxuriate in the soft-touch surface when mousing around and using gestures. Even clicking feels a little bit snappier.

Display: The Surface Pro has never looked better


The new PixelSense display on the Surface Pro 4 is stunning. The 2736 x 1824, 12.3-inch screen is bright, colorful and simply a joy to look at. When I watched the trailer for MTV's The Shannara Chronicles, everything from the turquoise Elfstones to the blood-soaked orcs looked sharp and vivid.
With an average screen brightness of 382 nits, the Surface Pro 4 is brighter than any Surface yet, and more luminous than its competition. The Spectre x360 (339 nits), Satellite Radius 12 (338 nits) and the 13-inch Macbook (334 nits) were close, but still noticeably dimmer.
The Surface Pro 4's color accuracy is nearly perfect, achieving a Delta-E rating of 0.35 (numbers closer to zero are better). The Toshiba Satellite Radius 12 and HP Spectre x360 were less accurate, but close, with Delta-E ratings of 0.6 and 1.25. The Macbook was a good deal worse, with a rating of 4.3.
Editing photos is a pleasure with a color range that almost perfectly covers the sRGB spectrum (99.7 percent). HP's x360 has a slightly wider color range, at 103.2 percent, while Toshiba's Radius 12 was almost identical, at 100 percent. The 13-inch Macbook Air was much more limited, at 65.8 percent.

Audio

Traditional laptops could learn a thing or two from the Surface Pro 4, whose dual, front-facing speakers positioned on either side of the screen project audio toward your ears, instead of to the sides or into a desk like some other systems do. The speakers aren't superloud, but they can fill a medium-sized room pretty well, and there's almost no distortion. Like many portable systems, the SP4's speakers are a little weak on bass, but otherwise, audio is pretty balanced. When I listened to Major Lazer's "Lean On," I found the mids and highs to be quite crisp, although I missed the depth and impact I was used to hearing in the bass line.
MORE: Best 2-in-1s (Laptop/Tablet Hybrids)

Heat: Still hot, but it's not a deal breaker

The Surface Pro 3 had problems staying under our 95-degree-Fahrenheit comfort threshold, and so does the SP4. On the Laptop Mag Heat Test, which involves streaming 15 minutes of HD video, the bottom edge of the Surface Pro 4 reached 101 degrees. In back, the left side of the tablet measured 100 degrees, while the right was slightly cooler, at 96 degrees. Overall, temps aren't high enough to be painful, but may cause some sweaty palms if you're using the device as a tablet. 

Ports and Webcam: Same ports, but say 'Hello' to new cameras


Because Microsoft didn't want to make existing Surface Pro 3 accessories obsolete, ports haven't changed on the Surface Pro 4. You get a proprietary magnetic-charging port, one USB 3.0 port and a mini DisplayPort on the right; a combo headphone/mic jack on the left; and a microSD card reader hiding behind the kickstand in back. I would have liked to see an additional USB-C port somewhere on the system, though.
The front camera features the same 5-megapixel resolution as on the SP3, but now has Windows Hello facial recognition and the rear camera has been upgraded to 8 MP. Both cameras are capped at full-HD for recording videos.

Unlike a lot of low-rent front cams, the SP4's 5-MP front shooter takes a pretty decent photograph. In a picture snapped in our well-lit office, details in my hair and shirt were sharp and in focus. However, the camera struggled a bit with exposure, as the wall behind was blown out while the overall picture looked a little dark.
Microsoft has some work to do on the software for its rear camera. On two out of the three test units we received, there was noticeable pixilation and artifacts in the upper right corner of the camera window. Plus, the camera had trouble focusing on anything. On the third unit, the pixilation wasn't as obvious, but would crop up when moving the tablet around rapidly. The camera was also very slow to focus and adjust its exposure.

Performance: Speedy SSD and improved performance

Featuring a 2.4-GHz Intel Core i5-6300U CPU, 8GB of RAM and a 256GB SSD, the Surface Pro 4 has enough oomph to deal with pretty much any non-3D-intensive application. You want to stream multiple 1080p videos with upward of 20 Chrome tabs open in the background? No problem, and there's plenty of speed left over to handle Skype, Photoshop and a few PDFs at the same time, too. 
In Geekbench 3, which evaluates overall system performance, the SP4 scored an impressive 6,811. That's better than systems with older Core i5 CPUs, such as the 13-inch Macbook Air (5,783) and HP Spectre x360 (4,037), and even new Core-i7 PCs such as Toshiba's Satellite Radius 12 (5,779).
The 256GB SSD is also blazing fast, with a transfer speed of 318.1 MBps. That's two times faster than the Satellite Radius 12 (141.4 MBps) and the Spectre X360 (141.4 MBps), although just a bit slower than the Macbook Air (358.4 MBps).
Using OpenOffice, the Surface Pro 4 matched 20,000 names and addresses in just 4 minutes and 11 seconds. While that's a few seconds slower than the Macbook Air (4:03), it was a minute faster than the HP Spectre x360 (5:04) and a minute and a half faster than the Satellite Radius 12 (5:34).

Graphics: A new generation of integrated graphics

The Intel HD graphics 520 in the SP4's 6th Gen Core i5 chip is a significant upgrade from previous integrated solutions. That doesn't mean every game is going to do well at its native resolution of 2736 x 1824, but when I played Legends of Legends, the system stayed firmly above 60 fps at high graphics even without lowering the resolution.
In 3DMark's Fire Strike graphics test, the Surface Pro 4 scored 843, which was about the same as Toshiba's Satellite Radius 12 and better than the HP Spectre x360 (710).
Then, when we ran World of Warcraft at 1920 x 1080 at auto settings, the SP4 managed a definitely playable 47 fps. The Spectre x360 and the Radius 12 managed 26 fps and 13 fps respectively, at the same settings. The Macbook air managed a respectable 33 fps at the same settings, but at a lower resolution of 1400 x 900. 

Battery Life: A step back

So far, everything has been looking really peachy for the Surface Pro 4, but here's the downer: subpar battery life. On Laptop Mag's Battery Test (continuous Web surfing over Wi-Fi at 150 nits), the SP4 fizzled out after just 6 hours and 5 minutes. 
MORE: 10 Tablets with the Longest Battery Life

That's better than the paltry 5:17 turned in by the Toshiba Radius 12, but an hour and a half less than last year's SP3 (7:42) and 2 hours less than the ultraportable average. HP's Spectre x360 was even better (9:28), and Macbook Air 13 more than doubled the Surface Pro 4, at 14 hours flat.

Surface Pro 4 vs. Surface Book

With the introduction of the Surface Book, Microsoft now has an even more powerful member of the Surface family to choose from. The superpremium Surface Book is for people with money to burn, or who refuse to compromise on a real keyboard or optional discrete graphics. Meanwhile, the Surface Pro 4 is for people who want something that's light, portable andpowerful but don't have a real need to edit videos or render 3D objects on a regular basis.
MORE: Best Laptops for College Students
It's weird saying that the Surface Pro 4 is now the midrange member of Microsoft's Surface family, but with a starting price of $1,029 (with keyboard), versus $629 for the Surface 3 (with keyboard) and $1,499 for the Surface Book, that's just how it is. The one remaining question is if Microsoft will continue to produce the SP3. If so, it's a worthy, and less expensive alternative for people who might not need the extra levels of sensitivity on the stylus, but will appreciate better battery life and still-proficient performance.

Software and Warranty: Windows 10, clean and simple

The Surface Pro 4 comes with a pristine copy of Windows 10 Pro and a limited one-year warranty. There's no bloat from preloaded trial software or annoying antivirus programs, and that's exactly how I like it. With Windows 10, you also get a ton of useful features such as the ability to make notes and drawings directly on Web pages in Edge, then save them or send them to others.

There's also Cortana, Microsoft's digital assistant. It can do a wide variety of things from creating simple reminders or finding out the score of last night's baseball game to recommending you a restaurant or movie based on your personal preferences.

Configurations: 1TB costs how much?

Please Microsoft, offer a bundle that comes with a keyboard, because without it, the Surface isn't going to replace anyone's laptop, and the not-so-optional accessory adds an extra $130 to the actual price. Models start at $899 (without a Type Cover) for an Intel Core M3 CPU with 4GB of RAM and a 128GB SSD, and can cost up to an outlandish $2,699 for an Intel Core i7 processor, 16GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD. The 512GB SSD option requires at least an i5 CPU, while the 1TB edition is only available along with an i7 chip and 16GB of RAM. But really, unless you like to have a lot of processing you'll never use, our i5, 8GB of RAM and 256GB SSD review unit hits the sweet spot in terms of price and performance, at $1,429 with a Type Cover.

Bottom Line

I want to give the Surface Pro 4 a higher score. The PixelSense display is superb bit of engineering, and the new 6th Gen Intel chip delivers the kind of swift performance I'm looking for, but the 6-hour battery life holds the SP4 back from glory. For stylus aficionados, the increased pressure sensitivity and optional pen tip give more depth to your drawings, but probably won't do much to improve the chicken-scratch notes everyone else is making. Instead of the leap we saw on the Surface Pro 3, the SP4 is an iterative step forward with a sizeable step back on battery life.

iPad Buying Guide: Which One is Right for You?

ipad buying guide lead
With five different models in three sizes and prices ranging from $269 to $1,029, there has never been more variety for iPad shoppers. That's a good thing, but how do you decide which one to buy? Use our handy iPad buying guide to get the right Apple slate for your needs and budget.

Common Features

All iPads provide access to more than 1 million apps optimized for the big screen, which is far more than what Android or Windows devices offer. You can also expect a high-quality aluminum unibody design and a bright and crisp display.
With iOS 9.3, iPads are now better nighttime companions. The Night Shift feature shifts the color temperature away from blue light that can make it harder for you to get to sleep. Also, the iOS update improves security on the Notes app with password protection and adds multiuser support.
Also note that all iPad models can be ordered with 4G LTE capability, which allows you to get online when you're out of Wi-Fi range. You'll pay $129 more than you would for the Wi-Fi-only version, plus the cost of whatever monthly data plan you sign up for.

iPad Models Compared

The iPad lineup is made up of three families: the iPad Pro, iPad Air and the iPad mini. But as you drill down to the individual models, there is plenty of variety in specs, features and price. Here's a quick breakdown.
 specs chart image
Apple iPad Pro 12.9-inch
The 12.9-inch iPad Pro delivers a big and beautiful display, fast performance and long battery life, but it's best for creative pros. The Apple Pencil (sold separately for $99) delivers awesome precision, and the A9X processor can handle anything you throw at it. If you add the $169 Smart Keyboard, you've got a 2-in-1 that might be able to rival your laptop. 

Apple iPad Pro 12.9-inch Review »

From $735.00
Amazon
Apple iPad Pro 9.7-inch
The 9.7-inch iPad Pro offers the same beautiful display, power and support for the Apple Pencil and Smart Keyboard as its 12.9-inch big brother. The key differences are a more affordable $599 starting price, a Rose Gold option and the ability to shoot 4K video and 5-MP selfies. 
Apple iPad Air 2
The Air 2 is thin and powerful, and $200 less than the 9.7-inch iPad Pro. The Air 2's screen is the same as the one on the new Pro flagship line. But, this 0.24-inch slim slate packs an A8X processor, which still delivers fast CPU and graphics performance. And like its fancier brethren, the Air 2 offers Touch ID and runs iOS 9.3 with Night Shift technology. 

iPad Air 2 Review »

From $399.00
Amazon
Apple iPad Mini 4
If you're looking for a more purse-friendly tablet with a stunning screen, the iPad mini 4 may be the device for you. It features the same pixel resolution as the larger iPad Pro and iPad Air models on a smaller, 7.9-inch display. It also features the same advanced 8-MP and 1.2-MP cameras as the ones on the iPad Air 2, but its more compact size may be more suitable for small or childlike hands. 

Apple iPad Mini 4 Review »

From $349.00
Amazon
Apple iPad mini 2
It's the oldest and least expensive iPad that Apple sells. But old doesn't mean dead. The iPad mini 2 features a Retina display, long battery life and zippy A7 performance for just $269. You won't get Touch ID support or Apple Pencil support, but you will get access to the latest iOS 9.3 update. It's worth noting that you can't get the mini 2 in Gold or Rose Gold; just Silver or Space Gray. 

iPad mini 2 Review »

From $299.00
Amazon

iXpand Flash Drive Frees Up Space on Your iOS Device

Your iPad or iPhone is the digital equivalent to the hallway closet in your home. When you tossLive Photos that are twice as large as normal pictures on top of all the dusty videos, apps, music files and movies, suddenly that 16GB of onboard storage just doesn't cut it.
It's time to haul that stuff out from the digital closet and into a digital garage. SanDisk's iXpand flash drive wants to be that garage.

Design

Starting at $49 for 16GB of alternative storage, the petite iXpand thumb drive has two ports on its opposite ends: a USB 3.0 port for swapping files to or from PCs and a lightning port to plug into your iPad or iPhone. The middle looks more or less like an average thumb drive.  
sandisk-ixpand_1The plug-and-save iXpand comes in several sizes: 16GB for $49, 32GB for $69, 64GB for $90 and 128GB for $129. Once you settle on the amount of space your accumulated clutter demands, the next concern is setting up the iXpand.

Setup

You'll want to download the iXpand Sync app. It features clear-cut file management that backs up new media the second it's saved to your iDevice. The free app lets you play video files, create playlists out of stored music and snap pictures, all within the iXpand Sync app. Plus, you can shelter files behind password-protected safe folders.
From the app, you follow prompts to create a backup of all your photos, video and media files. Next, the app asks if you'd like to delete the original files, leaving your device's storage locker free, clear and open for new content.
Persistent_prompt_newIf you choose to keep the originals files, the iXpand Sync app will send persistent prompts to delete them. We saw these messages, very annoyingly, every 5 minutes.

Performance

On my tests, the iXpand took a little more than a minute to move a half-gigabyte bundle of 114 photos and eight captured videos from an iPad Pro. Sure, that sounds painless, but add full gigabytes to the load, and the time stacks up. An iPhone packed with 16GB of data could take a half hour to back up; a 64GB iPad could take 2 hours and serious change. In other words, when it comes to that first big data-haul, you'll be waiting around a bit. Luckily your iPhone or iPad is fully functional during backups.
Transfers to and from a PC via the USB 3.0 port were faster, as expected. I downloaded a 4K video file measuring 1.5GB from a nearby PC to the iXpand in a terse 33 seconds. That's about 45 MBps. On USBflashspeed.com's benchmark, the iXpand notched write speeds of around 45 MBps and read speeds of about 85 MBps. Both results are standard for 3.0 USB drives.

Special Features

Chief among the iXpand's perks are seamless automatic backups. The process is instant: Snap a picture with the drive connected, and a backup of the file is saved on the spot to the iXpand's drive. That goes ditto for any downloaded media files, contact information and files added to Facebook, Instagram and Picasa. However, there's no support for Twitter, Dropbox or Flickr.
And speaking of pictures, you can use the iXpand Sync app's internal camera to save pictures and video direct to the storage drive. That's a great feature if your iPhone or iPad's drive is packed wall-to-wall, with no room for new captures. You may, however, continue to stick with the native camera.
The in-app option lacks the capacity for HDR, square-photo, panorama, slow-motion-capture and time-lapse shooting modes that you'd find in the iOS camera app. iXpand's camera doesn't capture Apple's GIF-like Live Photos either, but it does go the extra mile to fully back up Live Photos captured in the native camera app, whimsical motions and all.
playlist_newThe playlist mode for music apps might be more useful. The iXpand makes it simple to gather music files and DRM-free iTunes files into a list. Without that feature, DJs can't cue up tracks flung across multiple albums, artists and file folders without performing tedious hunting-and-pecking through their digital media.
SanDisk purports that iXpand can handle in-app playback of video files, but our experience here was less satisfying. During an episode of The Flash, we watched on an iPad Pro as the superhero sped through his home turf, but we couldn't hear the wind as he ran or the sound of his voice. In fact, we couldn't hear anything at all. The iXpand's current firmware, as CNET discovered, doesn't support AC3 or DTS audio encoding. It's too bad those codecs exist on a large swath of downloaded, DRM-free video files.
If a video is DRM-protected — as are the files available via services like Amazon Video or iTunes — the iXpand can't play that media either. In other words, while you can store independently downloaded videos, you won't be able to watch them within the iXpand app, which SanDisk says you can do. The company declined to say if it has plans for a firmware update to fix the problem.

Encryption

Fans of encryption will appreciate that the iXpand lets you lock files behind a password (after which they are encrypted). When the iXpand is connected to a computer, the encrypted files reside in a locked folder to be opened and de-encrypted only with the proper password.

Bottom Line

The iXpand isn't a bad portable garage. Sure, there are some video files the app can't play back, but at least you can lock the garage door to protect other important data. The ability to add stand-alone music files with your DRM-free iTunes files is a plus, too.
untitled-5If you have a payload of content that exceeds 128GB, you may want to consider a larger backup alternative, but the iXpand is a good option for odds and ends. Why? Its speedy automatic backups alone will save you time and storage-related headaches.

QUESTIONS FOR CAMPUS INTERVIEW with answers 65

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