Microsoft is holding its customary fall Surface event on October 12th, and this year's presentation may be increasingly jam-packed than most. Rumors have swirled of not just new Surface Pro and Surface Laptop models, but a long-overdue Surface Studio refresh and plane a mini desktop. But how likely are those to pan out? We'll requite you an idea of what to expect.
Surface Pro 9
It scrutinizingly wouldn’t be a Microsoft hardware event without a new tablet, and the Surface Pro 9 could be one of the increasingly important updates to the lineup in recent memory. Windows Centralsources requirement the new model will merge the ARM-based Surface Pro X into the regular Pro family. If so, you’ll have your nomination of processor architectures without having to switch form factors — a first for the Pro series.
You might get a significant speed boost, whichever tweedle sits inside. Those same sources believe Intel-based Surface Pro 9 models will use 12th-generation Cadre i5 and i7 U-series processors (considerably faster than the Pro 8’s 11th-gen parts), while ARM versions will reportedly come with the SQ3, a custom variant of the Snapdragon 8cx Gen 3. Microsoft may stick with the maximum 32GB of RAM and 1TB of storage from before, although cellular models will theoretically support 5G.
Just don’t expect much to transpiration on the outside. Sources say the Surface Pro 9 will largely resemble its predecessor, well-constructed with a 13-inch 120Hz display, two Thunderbolt 4 ports, a front 5-megapixel camera, a rear 10MP cam and support for the Slim Pen 2. This may be an iterative design, but we liked the Pro 8 last year. It’s just a question of whether or not the pricing is reasonable. WinFutureclaims Europeans may pay the equivalent of $1,300 for a Cadre i5 version with 256GB of storage, but that might not reflect American pricing.
Surface Laptop 5
Microsoft hasn’t touched the Surface Laptop since spring 2021, so it’s due for a refresh. Thankfully, one appears to be in the pipeline. Both Windows Central and WinFuture insiders requirement a Surface Laptop 5 is in the works with some modest but meaningful improvements.
The 13.5- and 15-inch portables would ship with 12th-gen Cadre i5 and i7 processors that would represent tangible upgrades over older chips. However, the most notable transpiration may be what you don’t get — WinFuture says there won’t be any AMD Ryzen-powered variants of the Surface Laptop 5. The machine may offer Thunderbolt 4 support for the first time, though.
Like its tablet counterpart, the Surface Laptop 5’s diamond might be virtually unchanged. Leakers don’t visualize cosmetic updates untied from a possible sage untried verisimilitude option borrowed from the Laptop Go 2. That won’t be a problem if you like Microsoft’s minimalist aesthetics, but it may be disappointing if you wanted an eye-catching notebook like the XPS 13 Plus or MacBook Air M2 — expressly considering the rumored $1,200 asking price in Europe.
Surface Studio 3
To say Microsoft has neglected the Surface Studio would be an understatement. The most recent version of the all-in-one desktop was released in 2018, and its specifications are woefully overdue the times. Windows Central recently offered some hope, though, as it hears a Surface Studio 3 is finally on the way.
The new PC will supposedly use the familiar (but still clever) chassis from the first two Studios, including its signature tilting, stylus-friendly 28-inch display. Microsoft will instead focus on the internals, upgrading to an 11th-gen Cadre i7 CPU (sorry, no 12th-gen here) with Thunderbolt 4 ports. There may be an improved webcam, too, withal with Dolby Vision HDR visuals and Dolby Atmos audio.
You might have to deal with some conspicuous omissions. The Surface Studio 3 may ditch the SD vellum slot, and there could be just one configuration with 32GB of RAM and a 1TB SSD. As with its ancestors, the revised computer could be aimed squarely at creative pros who want a pen-friendly exhibit and are willing to pay for the privilege. There’s no leaked pricing as of this writing, but with specs like those it’s unrepealable to be expensive.
Wildcards: A mini PC and Surface accessories
These events sometimes include leftfield introductions (who would have predicted the Surface Laptop Studio?), but you may need to tone lanugo your expectations this year. The biggest treat may be the release of the previously-teased Project Volterra, a meaty desktop aimed at developers towers ARM-native Windows apps with AI features. So, it won’t be the Surface equivalent to the Mac mini, then.
Accessories may be the only other highlights. Windows Central’s Zac Bowden recently shared images of what he says are updated Surface Keyboard and Surface Pen models that could come with the Surface Studio 3 in wing to selling separately. A Surface Mouse revision may be available, too. Bowden remoter suggested that you could see a “premium” speaker as well as a Teams-oriented remote, but there’s little else known well-nigh them.
We wouldn’t count on other Surface computers or mobile devices. There haven’t been murmurs of a Surface Duo 3 phone, and Microsoft put the Surface Neo on ice in 2020. It’s moreover nonflexible to imagine a Surface Go revision, for that matter. Barring surprises, this event appears focused on cadre Surface devices and not much else.