RedJaron :
Yeah, because who wants a brand new 2-in-1 when you can get a two generation old, refurbished laptop for the same money, right? I never said you can't find nice deals on EoL tech that's getting cleared out ( that Toshiba isn't too bad, if a bit old. ) Why don't you try to compare this against current competing models, particularly with a FHD touchscreen? I can find a few decent i3 models around $550, and those are compelling, but it's not until you get over $650 that you start seeing i5 models like you're talking about ( and they won't be as small as the Surface 3.
Wait, refurbished? One of those ones is, yes, but the second one isn't - and it's the cheaper one. Perhaps you should work on your honesty, or reading comprehension? One of the two, but one of them is quite deficient.
Actually, the metric in question was speed, and that i5 - very similar to what is in my Iconia W700 - is going to blow the new Surface 3 out of the water for performance. You wanted an i5 Ultrabook for under $700? There it is. It'll cost less than a Surface 3, has more storage, more RAM (than the $639 model of Surface), a far beefier processor, and comes with the keyboard. Be honest yourself - with previous gen tablets ATOM tablets like the T100 coming in at $350 WITH a keyboard, the $639 pricing for the new Surface 3 pretty much comes off as brand name tax. This is MS's very own Apple mark up at work and little else.
stevejnb :
Yeah, that reason was the Surface RT. The Surface Pro sold out. Be honest.
Are you kidding me? I spent months looking at Surface Pros for my wife from virtually every vendor under the sun trying to get a deal ended up getting her one for Christmas (bought October 2013 from a Best Buy in Calgary). You know why I finally made the leap? Because they were axing prices. You know what's funny about that? I got her Surface Pro 1 for under $600 - because they were ditching excess stock they couldn't get rid of at regular prices. The REALLY funny thing is, I kept checking up on that Best Buy's stock after that and they had 128gb models left for two weeks after that, with about $300 knocked off its regular price. THIS is that product you're telling me was constantly sold out?
Outside of the very initial shipment of Surface Pro's, I never saw any evidence of it selling out. Be honest yourself... The thing sold respectably, but it wasn't some world breaking seller. If you want me to believe that, show proof of the Surface Pro being constantly off shelves after its initial rush.
stevejnb :
So you consider critical praise and constant demand such that the Pros were consistently sold out to only be a "middling success." Got it.
Actually, it got *plenty* of critical reviews as well. Didn't work well on your lap, expensive extra keyboard, poor heat management, terrible battery life... Something tells me you're the type who just sort of glosses over those types of reviews though...
And I don't know how else you would describe it. It was certainly a success - but anything more than middling? Not really. It took three generations for it to really pick up and become a "must have" type item.
stevejnb :
The basic Surface just got a huge boost in performance ( x86 CPU and RAM, ) looks ( higher res screen, ) and usability ( full Win 8.1, ) and you expect it to be cheaper than the original?
Once again, if products like the T100 are any indicator, HELL YES. Last gen ATOM tablets with keyboards were going for $350... Now we're to believe that they warrant a $639 price tag BEFORE the added $130 for the keyboard? Please - this is the type of rampant hardware cost inflation that drives me away from products I would otherwise like. May be good for snotty college kids who moms are paying for their toys, or business types who have very specific needs, but I don't need that kind of crap mark up. Or, are you convinced that the magnesium chassis and the kickstand is what's jacking the price up that much?
Oh, and seeing as you mentioned RAM in there, I hate to break it to you, but that $500 USD/$639 CDN Surface is still kicking around at 2gb of RAM. Sadly, you can get phones with more RAM than that - and for less money than this tablet costs.
At this point, you are defending MS charging a premium price for you having the privilege of owning a Surface - in other words, basically what Apple does. Now of course, this is expected, if they can get away with it. Personally, I won't applaud them for it... And frankly, you doing so and defending them charging a Surface tax on the hardware makes you come off as a rather raging MS fanb...
I'll leave it at that.