The Surface Laptop Studio is available today, October 5, starting at $1,599 (around £1,200, AU$2,200) at least in the US. Ports: 2 x Thunderbolt 4, combo audio jack, Surface Connect port The Surface Laptop Studio also has official Dolby Atmos (and Dolby Vision, mind you), so we're ready to roll with Dolby encoded content of all sorts.Here is the Surface Laptop Studio configuration sent to TechRadar for review:ĬPU: 1.3GHz Intel Core i7-11370H (quad-core, 12MB Intel Smart Cache, up to 4.8GHz with Turbo Boost) Per Microsoft's tech specs for this machine, we have "Quad Omnisonic speakers, including four stereo 2-way speakers with invisible woofers" here, so it shouldn't be too much of a surprise that the audio in this machine has some kick to it. Moving from Laptop to Stage was the biggest surprise of the set – almost as if the chamber the Stage Mode creates acts to amplify the sound. I was worried that the power of the audio would lessen once we switched modes, from Laptop to Stage to Studio, but honestly it was just as good with one as it was with the other. The speaker system on this machine is beefy. We won't know until we've tested the device for said "very long time" – but for now, it looks and feels like the most elegant implementation of a transforming display hinge we've seen so far. Microsoft's implementation of this fabric and this hinge make for a solution that appears to be robust enough that it'll last a very long time. Behind the display is a "Dynamic Woven Hinge", as they call it, made with woven fabric.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |