SQLServerCentral Editorial

Surface Book

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It's almost time for me to get a new laptop. I've had a Toshiba for about a year, but it's not held up well. The screen has gotten loose, the trackpad and clickers are not consistenly responsive, the pointer device sometimes drifts on its own, and I have had a couple memory related crashes. All in all, despite a similar travel schedule to what I've had the last couple years, this laptop is showing its age quicker than others. These are flaky issues, not easily reproducible, and something that the warranty doesn't seem to cover.

As I look to future travel and talks, I realize that I need to find something that might be more reliable. That's always tricky as it seems people have a variety of different experiences with the same model machine. This last year has made me hesitant to think about chancing a new, or unpopular brand, something I did last year in trying to find a small, lightweight machine that can handle 16GB of RAM.

I read a review of the Surface Book after two months, which is one I'd like to consider. I've been impressed with the Surface Pros, but prevented from using them as I need 16GB on the machine. The Surface 4, on which the Surface Book is based, has that capacity, so I am intrigued. I worried about the new hardware, but it seems that the Surface 4s have been fairly solid. A couple of firmware glitches relating to sleep mode, but I'm hoping those get ironed out in the next couple months. At least I hope they do because I really like the idea of a Surface machine.

I do suspect that like the reviewer, I'd mainly use the machine as a laptop. That's what I need, and I'm not a big consumer of media. However the option to use the machine as a tablet is interesting. I had the chance to use Rob Sewell's Surface 3 as a notebook with a stylus during a presentation at SQL Relay and enjoyed the experience. There are some nice OneNote integrations, though I'm not sure how often I'd want to take notes on a computer rather than paper.

However the main contender for me is probably a MacBook Pro. I loved the MacBook Air I had, and was disappointed to move away from it. I also want to do some iOS and cross platform development, which a MacBook would allow. The hardware is solid and proven, and it's a similar cost to the Surface. I have a few months to decide. If I go MacBook, I'll wait for the March (rumored) refresh. If I'm unsure that that time, I'll probably think about the Surface as a backup. Either way, I'll be in hardware search mode across the next few months, with fingers crossed that my current machine survives.

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