The Microsoft Surface is a great kitchen computer, and sadly, thatâs about it. You can tell a lot about a new product by how well you integrate it into your life, and for the Surface, the product has been largely sitting on my kitchen countertop for the past couple of weeks, except for that one time my daughterâs iPad was charging and she wanted to watch Netflix. Or that other time when I carried it to Startup Weekend, then ended up using it as a hard surface to press down on while writing with pen and paper.
Oh, Surface. You just donât fit in. At least not for me.
This is not another Surface review, to be clear. I donât review gadgets. We have people for that. Lots of them. Professionals. You should read those posts. This is an opinion. These thoughts have been itching inside my mind since my Surface arrived, and theyâre dying to get out.
If anything, Iâm biased to like the Surface. I wanted to like it, even.
I was a late switcher to Apple products. I didnât care for the fervor that surrounded Apple, and having once worked in I.T., I was more comfortable in the Windows universe. I didnât want to deal with the switching costs: productivity loss during the adjustment period, not ever really knowing the OS as well as I knew Windows, leaving behind software programs I had come to rely on, etc.
But the iPhone, as it turns out, was an ideal gateway drug. I switched. I learned. I adjusted. After the iPhone, came the MacBook Pro. Then an iPad. Now Iâm a slave to the iPhone upgrade cycle. Today, to return to Windows feels like the same kind of struggle as leaving it ever was in the first place. But Iâm predisposed to want to try on some level, if only to assuage the guilt and penalties associated with complete Apple ecosystem lock-in. (Well, complete except for that year and half using the Nexus S, and carrying an early Windows Phone 7 device for backup).
Overall, I donât dislike Windows 8 as an operating system. Actually, there are parts of it I like very much. The Windows 8 âdesktop,â for example, with its live-updating tiles is a welcome change from Appleâs incredibly boring interface involving app icons and folders. Even Google long ago out innovated Apple on this front, with Androidâs customizable homescreens and widgets, live wallpapers and thumbnail-based application switcher. Appleâs iOS homescreen feels dated, and the upgrades weâre being fed (or those withheld!) are too often serving Appleâs own interests, not ours as users. Like everyone, I miss the native Google Maps app. I didnât care for Appleâs delay on Facebook integration because the two companies couldnât figure out how to work together. I donât like pre-installed apps I canât delete (like many of Appleâs native ones on iOS). I donât like the inability to better customize the device to my own needs. (Why 12 icons in a folder? Why?!)
Windows 8 feels modern and different. The Metro design â" or whatever you call it now â" appeals to me. And the stripped down version known as Windows RT â" the only version the Surface currently supports â" is tolerable for light computing.
Now I know that a lot of ink has been shed over the ridiculousness of cramming the old-school âdesktopâ interface into the re-imagined Windows 8, but I can see where Microsoft felt like it had no choice in the matter in terms of supporting legacy software (and legacy users, resistant to change). Yes, it feels awkward to switch between the old and new. Jarring. But the ridiculous part to me is not legacy support â" this is Microsoft! â" but rather the decision to remove the âStartâ menu from this old-fashioned interface. Itâs like, âhereâs your stupid old Windows. Now good luck using it!â [Insert evil laugh here]. Yeah, thanks a lot.
Still, while Iâm attracted to the sheer âdifferentnessâ of the new Windows OS itself, one thought kept running through my head while using the Surface hardware: God, I wish I could use this OS on an iPad. And therein lies the problem. The Surface, well-built and sturdy as it may be, is a bizarre, bizarre machine.
Itâs simply an awful tablet. If you remove the keyboard and try to use in portrait mode, the thing is too long and too narrow. It feels heavy because itâs too thick, despite being about on par with the iPad in weight. But if you attach the keyboard, you then have to be sitting at a desk or table where you can prop the thing up. Itâs not a lap computer, which is nutty because tablet computers are for untethering you from a desk, and laptops have the word âlapâ in them for a reason. Only Microsoft could come up with a way to make a tablet/laptop combo that forces you back to your desk no matter the configuration you select.
Only Microsoft could make a tablet thatâs actually desktop PC.
And as a desktop PC, itâs too small for work day computing. Itâs a secondary device at best. iPad users wonât buy this instead of a new iPad. Laptop users will still buy laptops. Price sensitive Android users wonât bite for the price ($499+, but unusable without a keyboard which is an extra $119 for the less expensive Touch Cover option). E-reader buyers will look for something lighter.
Who, then, is this tablet/laptop for? And where the heck are you supposed to use this thing?
As for me, the Surface sits in my kitchen. And it works pretty well there for quick web searches, email checks, recipe lookups, a little YouTube and the like. Thereâs no point getting into details about how well Office performs, or the lack of apps available for the Surface with Windows RT, or other details â" this is an occasional use machine.
Anyway, the kitchen not the worst place for an oddball computer to end up â" the PlayBook, after all, quickly became the bathroom tablet. (That thing is the perfect size for leaving on top of the toilet.) But if I were to invest in switching to Windows 8 from OS X or iOS, I go for a ârealâ laptop or a ârealâ tablet, not this odd halfling creation which is, in reality, neither.
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