

- WHY MICROSOFT WORD IS NOT OPENING ON MY SURFACE 3 TABLET UPGRADE
- WHY MICROSOFT WORD IS NOT OPENING ON MY SURFACE 3 TABLET PORTABLE
- WHY MICROSOFT WORD IS NOT OPENING ON MY SURFACE 3 TABLET PRO
- WHY MICROSOFT WORD IS NOT OPENING ON MY SURFACE 3 TABLET PC
The Surface Pro didn’t have any trouble driving a 24-inch Dell monitor at a resolution of 1920 by 1080, mirroring the two screens at the same resolution.

The upshot is that you can take your Surface Pro on the road, and connect it to any antiquated monitor or projector you may encounter-a boon if you need to present a PowerPoint deck to a bunch of insurance underwriters in Tulsa.

For these reasons, it’s nice that the Pro comes with a Mini DisplayPort, which can drive not only HDMI connections (a trick Surface RT also offers via its “HD video out” port) but any device with a VGA input. Nor can you comfortably run multiple open chat windows on such a puny display.
WHY MICROSOFT WORD IS NOT OPENING ON MY SURFACE 3 TABLET UPGRADE
In comparing Surface Pro to my third-generation iPad, I really had to search for visible pixels and differences in display quality, and any deficits exhibited by Surface Pro melted away when the tablet was farther away from my face, and propped on a desk.īottom line: The Surface Pro display is a serious upgrade over Surface RT’s 1366-by-768-pixel, 148-ppi screen.īasic visual quality aside, the Surface family’s 10.6-inch screens don’t offer enough real estate for complex desktop productivity tasks like image editing. Nonetheless, the new tablet’s 1920-by-1080-pixel, 10.6-inch screen delivers 208 pixels per inch for a level of visual clarity that’s practically indistinguishable from that of the latest iPads (whose pixel pitch is 264 ppi). Releasing Surface Pro with a Retina-caliber display would have given Microsoft an impressive talking point, but that didn’t happen.
WHY MICROSOFT WORD IS NOT OPENING ON MY SURFACE 3 TABLET PC
Still, if you want a handheld tablet and an Ultrabook-caliber PC in the very same molded magnesium case, you’ll have to accept some compromises (at least until technology catches up to ergonomics). A technological breakthrough along those lines would have made headlines and buoyed the flagging Surface brand. The tablet’s heft and girth aren’t deal-breakers, but I’m disappointed that the engineers in Redmond weren’t able to dazzle the world with a truly svelte design. Both the new iPad and Surface RT weigh 1.5 pounds and are 9.4mm thick, while Surface Pro weighs 2 pounds and measures 13.5mm thick. Relative to Surface RT and the latest 9.7-inch iPad, Surface Pro is thick, chunky, and heavy with palpable mass. Thicker chassis, better display image: robert cardin There’s no mistaking that Surface Pro is thicker than its ARM-based sibling. If it can’t conceive, manufacture, and market the hands-down best Windows 8 hybrid in the world, it’s got unfinished business. Microsoft is Microsoft, damn it! It owns Windows. This is a problem because Surface Pro needs to stand out as a kick-ass reference design, and not be just another interesting-but-imperfect hardware option for anyone taking the Windows 8 plunge.
WHY MICROSOFT WORD IS NOT OPENING ON MY SURFACE 3 TABLET PORTABLE
And based on your needs, it might not be the best Windows 8 portable you can buy in the neighborhood of $1000. The bad news: Surface Pro doesn’t run away with the Windows 8 hybrid crown. Surface Pro comes much closer than Microsoft’s ARM-based RT offering to fulfilling that elusive promise of uniting a tablet and a PC in a single, uncompromised package. And thanks to Windows 8 Pro, it can run all the legacy desktop applications that we need for serious productivity. It has a vastly better display and Ultrabook-caliber components. The good news: Surface Pro is a marked improvement over Surface RT. Image: robert cardin Propped up on its VaporMg kickstand, Surface Pro cuts a handsome profile. Surface RT was the warm-up act, the proof-of-concept, but the good money has always been on Surface Pro, the Surface sibling with PC-caliber specs and a fully functioning desktop. This is the hardware everyone has been waiting for. But now we have Surface with Windows 8 Pro, part two of Microsoft’s always fascinating, sometimes heartbreaking Surface saga. When it launched in October, it showed the world a vision of a revolutionary tablet-laptop hybrid, but it couldn’t close the deal.
