![]() When it’s sitting on my lap and I rest my hands on the palm rest, it is nearly impossible for me to work without constantly feeling frustrated by the shaky base. The bigger downside is the keyboard’s flex. The glass trackpad, on the other hand (while it is plenty responsive and supports all the Windows gestures), can feel cramped and you probably will end up investing in an external wireless mouse. I’d expect even with a right to repair anything other than the screen will probably require buying a new mainboard which is unlikely to be cost effective.Speaking of the keyboard, it offers tactile and large keys that didn’t affect my typing pace too much. To achieve this main feature they have had to compromise on ease of repair. You don’t need one of the main selling points which is the size and weight, look to device s that meet your requirements. Too bad others are mostly stuck on the 16:9And there you have it. MS nailed it with the aspect ratio and 15 inch size. If other vendors' laptops had the same screen aspect ratio as the Surface, and few of them already come with Zen3 (vs Zen2 in Surface) thus besting the Surface in this spec, I wouldn't even bother looking at the Surface. It's the inability to repair that I'm not OK with.Ĭan't wait for the 'right-to-repair' laws to be introduced. But size and weight are of no concern to me. I guess this is why MS charges a premium for it. Dalek1234 said:I wouldn't be able to show you one, because of the size and weight you are talking about.
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