Microsoft Surface Pro X
- Visualizza
- 13.0" , PixelSense (2880 x 1920), IPS
- HDD/SSD
- fino a 512GB SSD
- RAM
- up to 16GB
- OS
- Windows 11 Home, Windows 10 Home, Windows 10 Pro
- Materiale del corpo
- Aluminum
- Dimensioni
- 287 x 208 x 7.3 mm (11.30" x 8.19" x 0.29")
- Peso
- 0.77 kg (1.7 lbs)
- Porte e connettività
- 2x USB Type-C
- 3.2 Gen 2 (10 Gbps)
- Wi-Fi
- 802.11ac
- Bluetooth
- 5.0
- Caratteristiche
- Lettore di impronte digitali
- Telecamera web
- 5.0MP Front-Facing + 10.0MP Rear-Facing
- Tastiera retroilluminata
- Microfono
- Dual far-field Studio Mics
- Altoparlanti
- 2x 2W, Dolby Audio
- Unità ottica
Tutti Microsoft Surface Pro X configurazioni
Prestazioni della CPU
Qui potete trovare la differenza di prezzo/prestazioni tra tutte le CPU che vengono in Microsoft Surface Pro X serie.
I risultati provengono dal test Cinebench 20 Multi-core (più alto è il punteggio, meglio è)
Prestazioni della GPU
Qui potete trovare la differenza di prezzo/prestazioni tra tutte le GPU che vengono in Microsoft Surface Pro X serie.
I risultati sono per il benchmark 3DMark: Fire Strike (Graphics) (più alto è il punteggio, meglio è)
Microsoft Surface Pro X recensione approfondita
Not long ago we managed to snatch a Surface Pro 7 for review, and we were baffled by the versatility this tablet offered. Without a doubt, its strongest ace was the Ice Lake processor inside, which meant you can run pretty much every app on Windows. Now, we have the Surface Pro X, which has a pretty euphonious name but is an inferior device, compared to the Surface Pro 7.One of the main reasons why is the ARM architecture it uses. This means that 64-bit programs are pretty much out of the question. However, the Microsoft SQ1 CPU is based on the Snapdragon 8sx and features a higher clock ([...]
Pro
- Covers 93% of the sRGB gamut (Chi Mei P130ZFA-BA1) and has a great color accuracy
- Thin, light, and premium design
- Very good build quality
- High maximum brightness (450 nits)
- IR face recognition and LTE support
Contro
- Very limited I/O
- Memory is soldered to the motherboard
- Windows is not very well suited for ARM integration in 2020