The Surface lineup for Microsoft has been extremely interesting to watch. What first launched in October 2012 as the Surface RT has been constantly iterated upon, and of course the Surface Pro line has evolved even faster. Surface Pro 3 has finally provided Microsoft with something that critics and consumers alike seem to have bought in to, and sales have been very strong since the Pro 3 was launched on May 20th 2014. However there has always been questions about the “consumer” version of Surface. Surface RT was, frankly, a sales disaster. The much improved Surface 2 fixed many of its shortcomings, but certainly did not set the world on fire. So now we have the third generation Surface, aptly named the Surface 3. There are a pile of changes that Microsoft has made to this generation of device, and obviously their hopes are that Surface 3 will be as popular as the Surface Pro 3 has been, but extending the device back down to a lower price point.

That price point is important. As much as the Surface Pro 3 has gained its share of fans, it is far from cheap. The most inexpensive model starts at $799, and for that you still do not get the keyboard. Surface 3 moves that bar down significantly, and the starting price is the exact same as the original Surface RT, at $499. Microsoft had to trim down the Pro model to hit this price point, but the cuts were well placed.

Surface RT compared to Surface 3

I think looking at the Surface 3 in a vacuum would be improper, since the device now is really an evolution of the previous two Surface models. From a build quality standpoint, the original Surface RT was top notch, with its VaporMg case, the revolutionary kickstand, and high attention to detail for all of the aspects from buttons to display. I think in 2015 it is pretty obvious what the shortcomings of the Surface RT were though. Performance was less than acceptable with the Tegra 3 SoC on board, and Surface RT was handicapped with the confusingly named Windows RT operating system and the lack of software compatibility that goes with using an ARM CPU instead of traditional x86. Surface 2 fixed the performance issue by moving to NVIDIA’s Tegra 4 SoC, and while not the outright fastest tablet chip, it was at least in the ballpark. However it kept the Windows RT operating system at a time when everyone else had abandoned it.

Surface 3 has fixed that final issue and at the same time made some amazing improvements to the overall design and feel. Full x86 Windows is on tap, for better or for worse, and powered by a brand new SoC. This must be a special moment in history where a Microsoft built device is the launch vehicle for a brand new product from Intel. The Surface 3 is powered by the 14nm Intel Atom x7, in this case the x7-Z8700 model which is the current top of the line Atom processor. Codenamed Cherry Trail, this is the massaged Bay Trail cores now built on Intel’s now mature 14nm FinFET process, and they include the same GPU cores as Broadwell.

Microsoft Surface Comparison
  Surface 3 (Base) Surface 3 (High) Surface 2
Size 10.52 x 7.36 x 0.34 inch
267 x 187 x 8.7 mm
10.81 x 6.79 x 0.35 inch
275 x 173 x 8.8 mm
Weight 1.37 lbs - 622 g 1.49 lbs - 675 g
Display 10.8-inch ClearType Full HD Plus
1920x1280 resolution, 3:2 ratio
10-point multi-touch
Surface Pen Support
10.6-inch ClearType Full HD 1920 x 1080 resolution, 16:9 ratio
5-point multi-touch
Battery 28 Wh, 13 W AC Adapter 31.5 Wh, 24 W AC Adapter
Storage 64GB 128GB 32GB or 64GB eMMC
RAM 2GB 4GB 2GB
CPU Atom x7-Z8700
Quad Core 14nm
1.6 GHz Base Frequency
2.4 GHz Burst Frequency
NVIDIA Tegra 4
4x ARM Cortex-A15 @1.7GHz
WiFi Marvell 802.11ac + BT 4.0
LTE Models at a later date
802.11n + BT 4.0
Ports USB 3.0, Mini-DisplayPort, microSD,
Micro USB charging, 3.5mm Headset Jack
USB 3.0, micro-HDMI, microSD, proprietary charging
Software Windows 8.1
Office 365 Personal with 1TB OneDrive (1-year)
Windows RT 8.1
Office 2013 RT Home & Student Edition
Front Camera 3.5 MP 3.5 MP
Rear Camera 8.0 MP with Autofocus 5.0 MP
Operating System Windows 8.1 64-bit Windows RT 8.1
Warranty 1-year limited 1-year limited
Price $499 $599 $449

In addition to the new SoC, Surface 3 can be purchased with up to 128 GB of eMMC storage, and the higher storage models also come with 4 GB of RAM. This compares to the base model which is 2 GB of RAM and 64 GB of storage, which is already one of the big improvements Microsoft has made with Surface. 32 GB of storage on a Windows tablet is really the bare minimum required, and the move to 64 GB as the base is going to make this tablet far more usable. You can of course add more storage with a micro SD card, but until Windows gets the great SD card support from Windows Phone, it still means that you need to manage your storage more than you should have to.

There are so many changes with the Surface 3 that really, this is likely the Surface that most people wanted from day one, but did not know it. First up is the new (again) kickstand.

Kickstand and Accessories
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  • Brett Howse - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    The battery in the Surface Pro 3 is 50% larger. 28 Wh vs 42 Wh
  • chizow - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    That gulf will probably grow as well with the rumors SP4 may have a Core M variant. Cherry Trail is a bit disappointing though, not a huge increase in performance and this S3 actually has worst battery life than some of its Bay Trail predecessors like the Asus T100.

    Even more telling is the next slowest device in most of your tests is the $79 HP Stream 7, and while the Surface 3 certainly has more going for it in terms of form factor and functionality, a sub-$100 device is going to get a lot of passes where a $500 might not.
  • Shadowmaster625 - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    That battery is the ultimate symbol of greed. Like they couldnt eat an extra $6 to give the thing a respectable battery. We need some explanation as to what exactly is the bottleneck in a game like DOTA 2. The <20 fps is extremely disappointing. but is it the GPU or the anemic CPU cores that hold it back? And why didnt they at least double the L1? Talk about greed.
  • dullard - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    "I’m not sure if we have found a “perfect” aspect ratio for a tablet"

    One aspect ratio would be nearly perfect for almost every use, if only tablet manufacturers would make a tablet at that aspect ratio. That nearly perfect ratio is 2^0.5 : 1 (about 1.414 : 1).

    1) A program designed to fill the screen at 2^0.5 : 1 would also perfectly fill half the screen at 1 : 2^0.5/2 (which is still 1.414 : 1 when rotated). Finally, we could have distortion-free multi-tasking with no extra programming needed, an issue that no tablet has really yet solved.

    2) It is a natural-feeling aspect ratio, not too tall or too narrow. No "narrow video" warnings needed. Webpages that haven’t been converted to mobile would still work well. It would have good hand feel.

    3) It is almost exactly A4 paper ratio (1 : 1.41421 vs 1:1.41428). A4 is the standard paper for 2/3rds of the world. Thus a Word document, PDF, or similar would fill the screen uncropped. It isn't far off from from the US 11:8.5 paper standard either.

    4) It is pretty much in the middle of the 4:3 digital camera and 3:2 DSL camera aspect ratios. That means when using the camera to see photos, it will look good with minimal cropping or black bars.

    I could go on and on.
  • Jon Tseng - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    >Having the third position really helps in a lot of situations, and while I would have liked the
    >final one to open as wide as the Surface Pro 3,

    There is actually a fourth position. Give it a good shove and it collapses even flatter. Not sure if this is a genuine position or a manufacturing fail safe though!
  • Jon Tseng - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    More details herehttps://www.reddit.com/r/Surface/comments/33rxja/s...

    I tried it on a demo unit in curry's. It works the stand is def engineered to open this far (whether its engineered to do it regularly I don't know)
  • gsusx - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    Wtf. Curry's have them in stock. . Where?
  • Jon Tseng - Tuesday, May 5, 2015 - link

    The big Curry's on Tottenham Ct Road has a demo unit out. Had stickers on saying "property of Microsoft not sale stock" so presumably its a pre-release date demo unit. Yeah I was surprised to see it too!
  • beggerking@yahoo.com - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    micro usb type-c would be better , but a standard micro usb charging is still a huge leap forward vs any proprietary charging port.

    reversibility is for idiots. PERIOD.
  • kmmatney - Monday, May 4, 2015 - link

    I take it you haven't used a reversible charging plug? It is a much better solution. Period.

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