At $1,018*, The Surface Pro Is Priced Just Right

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The outcry is deafening. “The Surface Pro is priced too high!” “I’ll just get a MacBook Air!” “Microsoft is the next RIM!” “I LOVE APPLES!”

Ignore the noise and look at the situation. The Surface Pro is priced just right. For its size and form, the Surface Pro is a powerhouse computing platform and priced to sell. It might not outsell the MacBook Air but that’s okay.

The Surface Pro is not the Surface with Windows RT. The Surface Pro is a full Windows 8 machine powered by a legit Intel chipset. It’s fully capable of running any desktop application and most high-end games. Dump RAW photos into Lightroom through USB 3.0. Convert MKV videos with Handbreak. Dock the system and play Far Cry 3. With the Surface Pro, as they say, the world is your oyster.

But Microsoft screwed up. The $499 Surface RT left a bad impression on most people when it launched last year. The ARM-based counterpart is limited in functions and barely has enough computing power to run system tasks. The Pro should have been released alongside the RT model.

As it stands right now, Microsoft has to regain a lot of hopeful optimism it had before launching the Surface RT. Those who were turned off by the RT model are approaching the Pro model with a lot more caution.

For $1,019 the Surface Pro offers a Core i5 CPU with an Intel HD Graphics 4000 GPU. There’s 64GB of storage, 4GB of RAM, USB 3.0, Mini DisplayPort and a digitizer pen allowing owners to turn the Surface into a Wacom-style input tablet (that’s big for some buyers).

Spec for spec, the Surface Pro actually stacks up nicely against the MacBook Air. They’re about the same price and minus the touchscreen bits, they have about the same computing hardware. But they have different motives.

The $999 11-inch MacBook Air is Apple’s low-end device. Like the Surface RT, it offers just enough power to get by and nothing more. I wouldn’t recommend the base Air model for anyone that wants to venture outside of iPhoto or the web browser. It’s not a work machine; the $999 MacBook Air is a Facebook machine.

Microsoft built the Surface Pro for a different market. It’s not a base model. This is a serious machine aimed at the prosumer or enthusiast. This is the model that you buy if you want to get work done. With a price around a grand, it’s competing against similar Windows Ultrabooks or monster desktop replacement notebooks.

If priced any less, Microsoft would be setting the bar too low. PC makers often get stuck in a race to the bottom. By chasing the lowest price, consumers later expect inexpensive PCs. Microsoft wisely decided to avoid this game and price its first two PCs properly. The $499 Surface RT is on par with the iPad and the Surface Pro is competing with mid-range Windows notebooks.

Microsoft built the Surface family to be reference designs for future Windows 8 tablets. With these models,  Microsoft set the bar high enough that HP, Samsung, Dell and Asus will have to dig deep and reach high to beat. This bar also sets the expectation for future pricing. Anything lower would be considered cheap while anything higher should be viewed as a premium device.

The Surface Pro is not for everyone. It doesn’t have to be.

In fact, even before a single Surface Pro has been sold, Microsoft probably already considers its venture into the hardware business a success. Never before has a single Windows PC dominated the consumer mindset. The Surface Pro is a polarizing product. And that’s exactly what it should be. As Fast Company previously explained, your brand should piss someone off and I’ve never seen a PC that pisses people off like the Surface Pro.

That’s a good thing for us and a good thing for Microsoft.

*The Surface Pro’s MSRP is $899 but that doesn’t include a Touch Cover. You need a Touch Cover. Typing on the 10.6 inch display is painful. So let’s just be honest and say the Surface Pro starts at $1018.

The Daily Roundup for 01.22.2013

DNP The Daily RoundUp

You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

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Microsoft Surface Pro Is Worthless According To Ad

Microsoft surface pro worthless1 Microsoft Surface Pro Is Worthless According To Ad

The Microsoft Surface may not have had the greatest Q4 as it’s estimated to have only sold one million units, but that may been due to a number of reasons, one of them being potential Surface owners waiting for the Surface Pro to be released. We’ve heard rumors and hearsay for the past few weeks in regards to when it’s being released, but today, Microsoft gave the official word the Surface Pro will be available on February 9th in the U.S. and Canada.

Microsoft began its marketing blitz to educate anyone and everyone interested in a Surface Pro that it will be available on February 9. Iin their haste to spread the word, they accidentally uploaded an image on the official website for the Surface promoting the price for the product at $000.

Some might say this makes the Surface Pro worthless, while others might take this as a way to get a free Surface Pro. Either way, it’s an obvious type that we’re sure Microsoft wishes never happened, especially on the day they officially announce its availability.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: MSI Enjoy 71 Tablet, Microsoft Surface Pro Availability Officially Announced,

Microsoft Ad: Surface Pro Costs Zero Dollars

So this would be a pretty daring strategy from Microsoft. Surface Pro! NOW FOR JUST $000.00 DOLLARS! Errr… guys? More »

Microsoft Surface Pro Availability Officially Announced

surface pro Microsoft Surface Pro Availability Officially AnnouncedFolks, Microsoft has just announced the availability of its Surface Pro tablet in the U.S. and Canada. Mark your calendars, because the Surface Pro will be available for purchase on February 9th at all Microsoft retail stores and via online. The much-awaited tablet is also heading to Best Buy and Staples in the U.S. and Canada. Microsoft also confirmed that the 64GB model will be priced at $899 in the U.S. In addition to today’s official announcement, the company also broke the news that its Surface RT tablet will be made available to 13 additional markets internationally. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Microsoft Surface Pro Is Worthless According To Ad, MSI Enjoy 71 Tablet,

You Can Buy a Surface Pro on February 9th

The wait for the bigger, badder, probably a hell of a lot better Surface Pro will be over soon: it hits retailers early next month. More »

Surface Pro Arriving In The Coming Weeks

Microsoft Surface Pro thumb Surface Pro Arriving In The Coming WeeksIt looks like rumored January 29th release date of Microsoft’s Surface Pro tablet is true, if a new tweet from Panos Panay is to be believed. Panos Panay, currently the general manager of Microsoft’s Surface products, tweeted, “On my way to the factory to check out #Surface Pro coming off the line…arriving in the coming weeks.” That could the sign that we’ve all been waiting for. In November last year, Panos Panay confirmed the pricing of the Intel Core-powered tablet. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Sony Xperia Tablet Z Specifications Leaked?, AT&T Offering $100 Credit In Exchange For An HSPA+ Nexus 7 With A 2-Year Contract,

Microsoft Surface Pro Hands-On: This Is What It Should Have Been All Along

Surface RT was an enormous letdown—not because it was bad, but because it could have been so, so good. But Microsoft brought the Pro version to Vegas and let us play—and I couldn’t be happier. More »

Surface Pro Gets January 29 Release (Rumor)

surface pro release Surface Pro Gets January 29 Release (Rumor)The Microsoft Surface Pro has already hit the FCC in recent memory, and that can only mean one thing – the tablet is being prepared for a general release Stateside, although the exact roll out date has yet to be confirmed. Still, the latest rumors surrounding the Surface Pro points toward a January 29th release, as that could very well be the date where Microsoft lifts up the curtain on this device, having it appear in store shelves for sale the following day.

Softpedia cited sources close to Microsoft’s headquarters, and other than the rumored January 29th announcement, there were no additional details concerning this tablet. Could this be a cheeky attempt by Microsoft to rain down on RIM’s parade as the Canadian company prepares to bet the farm on the BlackBerry 10 platform at the launch event which is set to happen this January 30th in New York City? Patience, and plenty of it, will again come into play here. Just how many of you are interested in picking up this particular bad boy when it becomes available?

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Microsoft Surface Pro Gets FCC Approval?

The folks over at the FCC do have a pretty fun task – they get to play around with the latest gadgets before they have been released, but of course, as anyone can tell you, the grass is not necessarily greener on the other side. After all, what about those moments when you have to test out devices that are not exactly the best in town, and those can be quite a drag? Well, one thing’s for sure, if you are going to test out the Microsoft Surface Pro, it sure as heck sounds like a fun device to put through the paces before approving it for a general release to the masses.

It seems that there is a tablet which is in all probability, the Microsoft Surface Pro that has just passed through the FCC, considering how it runs on the Windows 8 operating system and sports the number 1514, which is only a couple less than the 1516 number that is what the Surface RT is associated with. For all intents and purposes, having FCC approval would mean that a path for a January release for the Intel-powered tablet is definitely in line, and may we tempt fate by saying that it will be revealed at CES 2013?

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