Microsoft Surface Pro 7+ comes with upgraded internals, removable SSD, and optional LTE...

nanoguy

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In brief: As working and studying from home remain the default way of getting things done, consumers and prosumers are in for a new treat from Microsoft, as the company has updated the Surface Pro 7 with beefier internals, a removable SSD, and optional 4G connectivity.

On Monday, Microsoft's Surface family of devices gained a new member in the form of the Surface Pro 7+, a model designed specifically for schools and business customers and based on the successful formula of the original Surface Pro 7 from 2017.

The overall design hasn't changed, as the Redmond giant says it "made a commitment to commercial customers on continuity of form factor." That means everything down to the placement of the microphone, magnets, card reader (microSDXC), and ports (a USB-C w/o Thunderbolt 4, a USB-A 3.2 Gen 2, and a headphone jack) is the same. However, Microsoft upgraded the internals with the latest 11th generation Tiger Lake-U processors, which Intel introduced last September, featuring Xe graphics and AI acceleration.

The Surface Pro 7+ is configurable with anything from an Intel Core i3-1115G4 paired with 8GB of RAM to a Core i7-1165G7 equipped with 32 GB of RAM. An even more practical CPU configuration is the Core i5-1135G7, which has optional LTE connectivity and eSIM support for over 180 countries. It's also worth noting that only the i7 model has a fan, while the others should be perfect if you need to keep noise at a minimum.

The base model starts at 128 GB of SSD storage, while the maxed out configuration comes with 1 TB of storage. More importantly, the SSD is removable just as it is with the ARM-based Surface Pro X. The Surface Pro 7+ should be user-upgradeable since it is an M.2 2230 module. Other notable features include a larger battery that can provide up to 15 hours of use and a 1080p front-facing camera optimized for dim environments, such as those found at home.

As is the case with Microsoft products designed for business and education, it's not clear when you'll be able to grab one yourself, but we do know the prices start at $899 for the Core i3 model with 8 GB of RAM and 128 GB SSD and $1,149 for the Core i5 with LTE models. The top model sporting a Core i7 processor, 32 GB of RAM, and 1 TB of storage will run you $2,799. Microsoft is planning to ship these starting January 15 to customers in the US, Canada, the UK, Australia, New Zeeland, and the EU.

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Thanks for the "7+" hint, as we have lost count how many flops there have been before.

Kidding. Well, maybe not so much.
 
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Not sure why there's so much hate here for the Surface... it's a fantastic device, and is vastly superior to every other tablet you can get.... with the possible exception of a maxed out iPad Pro - but I prefer having Windows (I use my iPad almost solely for ebooks, browsing and gaming).

I "only" have the 6... am very tempted by this though....
 
Not sure why there's so much hate here for the Surface... it's a fantastic device, and is vastly superior to every other tablet you can get.... with the possible exception of a maxed out iPad Pro - but I prefer having Windows (I use my iPad almost solely for ebooks, browsing and gaming).

I "only" have the 6... am very tempted by this though....

I see no "hate", only real worries or views. I had Surface Pros and Go and now only a Go 2, because it's for me the best "pal-hybrid" with enough power for office, web, quality Netflix and still some multimedia editing or gaming.

Microsoft suffers from an Intel- like syndrome and doesn't update considerably the Surface lineup. Surfaces are expensive, carry in 2019-2021 still old designs (they should all be like the Pro X or iPad Pro) and Intel chips are a bummer since a lot of years: expensive, a lot of heat, inefficient, bad gpu and Microsoft has the chance to work with AMD and make a good APU for the lineup. But... No. Not only that, but they charge a lot of money for the 16 GB 512 GB SSD counterparts, which are the only ones that effective are enough good to work with.

The SP lineup should have the i5 Xe graphics 8 GB 256 GB SSD as base model for $899 with keyboard and then for $1299 the i7 with Xe graphics 16 GB RAM 512 GB model. If you want more SSD or ram than $100 for each step upgrade.
 
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