Surface Studio 3: what we want to see
The Surface Studio 3 seems long overdue, and we think itās high time that Microsoft releases it.
After all, even though the Surface Studio 2 hit the streets at the very end of 2018 and may boast high-end Nvidia Pascal graphics, it still runs on 7th-generation Intel Kaby Lake laptop chips. Those 7th-generation laptop chips are pretty outdated these days, so the Surface Studio 2 is arguably already looking a little long in the tooth.
A Surface device running on an Ice Lake processor that has⦠well, surfaced⦠recently on Geekbench, but itās unlikely the Surface Studio 3 weāve been waiting for. We also havenāt come across any credible rumors regarding the computer. So, weāre still left speculating: what exactly will the Surface Studio 3 look like?
Weāre not sure when exactly weāll come across any concrete information regarding the new Surface Studio 3, especially so soon after the release of its predecessor. Microsoft cryptically announced a mysterious October 2nd event, but we highly doubt that the Surface Studio 3 will make an appearance.
So, for now, weāll have to settle for a wish list of sorts. Be sure to keep this page bookmarked, however, as weāll keep it up to date with all the latest news and rumors as they come.
Cut to the chase
- What is it? The next Surface Studio PC
- When is it out? TBD
- What will it cost? At least $3,499 (about £2,720, AU$4,850)
We donāt anticipate seeing the Surface Studio 3 at the October 2 even or any time soon after. (Image credit: TechRadar)
Surface Studio 3 release date
Weāre not sure what Microsoft has in store for us at the October 2nd event, but we donāt anticipate seeing the Surface Studio 3 there or any time soon after. Again, especially so soon after the release of Surface Studio 2.
After all, the original Surface Studio was released in December 2016, and it wasnāt followed up until two years later with the Surface Studio 2 hitting the streets in November 2018. Considering these two releases, we wouldnāt expect the Surface Studio 3 until later in 2020.
On the other hand, there have been considerable advances in mobile processor and graphics technology in that short span of time since the late 2018 release. This means that Surface Studio 2ās aging processor is nowhere good enough anymore. This alone could push Microsoft to update its desktop sooner rather than later.
Surface Studio 3 will hopefully be filled with some more cutting-edge hardware. (Image credit: TechRadar)
Surface Studio 3 price
Both the Surface Studio and its sequel are expensive devices, and both represent a massive expense for artists. So, it would be safe to think that the Surface Studio 3 will be at least as expensive.
The Surface Studio 2 already increased the price by $500 (AU$800, about £390) over the $2,999 (AU$4,699, about £2,390) original, setting users back $3,499 (AU$5,499, about £2,720).
If Microsoft does choose to raise the price even more, we just hope it means that the Surface Studio 3 is filled with some more cutting-edge hardware thatās worthy of robbing a bank for.
Thunderbolt 3 is now becoming the norm, and we'd love to see it on the Surface Studio 3. (Image credit: TechRadar)
What we want to see
The Surface Studio is already an extremely niche device, so itās kind of hard to make comparisons to existing products to try and build a wish list for the Surface Studio 3. However, there are a few things that we think Microsoft could improve on the Surface Studio 1 and 2. Those, coupled with features that we think have already become standard in computing, are what we hope to see in the Surface Studio 3 if and when it is released.
Come on, Thunderbolt 3
We get it, Microsoft: you donāt want to pay Intelās license for the Thunderbolt 3 standard. Itās understandable, but thereās only one problem with that: everyone else in the computing world is doing so. And, Thunderbolt 3 is now becoming the norm.
There are so many storage drives, monitors and other peripherals that rely on Thunderbolt 3 to do the job, and this is particularly true for professional products. By 2020, when we start seeing Thunderbolt 3 on flash drives, it will be all but essential. Even for the Surface Studio 3.
The Surface Studio 2 already has the USB-C port ā it just needs to take a step further. For a machine that wants to take center stage in the professional artistās setup, the lack of Thunderbolt 3 ā particularly for this price ā is inexcusable.
Hardware thatās actually up to date
To put things into perspective real quick, the Surface Studio 2 was released in November 2018 with Nvidia 10-series graphics and Intel Kaby Lake processors. The Pascal graphics are logical ā Nvidia didnāt share mobile-class RTX graphics until CES 2019.
But, Intel launched Coffee Lake H-series mobile processors all the way back in April 2018 ā more than six months before the Surface Studio 2 hit the streets. Weāre not saying that the Kaby Lake chips arenāt going to get the job done, they will. However, Coffee Lake processors would have gotten the job done faster.
Is it too much to expect an up-to-date processor? We donāt know which āLakeā Intel will be on in late 2020, but Microsoft: please include the newest processor in the Surface Studio 3? If weāre dropping over thousands on a computer, we definitely deserve up-to-date hardware.
Up the screen resolution
To be fair, the Surface Studio 2ās display is high-resolution enough. Still, why stop at 4,500 x 3,000 pixels when monitors such as the Dell UltraSharp UP3218K are becoming all the more common ā especially among creatives.
Weād like to see the Surface Studio 3 take screen resolution to the next level. Weāre not saying skip right to 8K, but perhaps we could see something in between, perhaps something that might outclass that iMac Pro display to make it more compelling choice to would-be Apple converts.
At the end of the day, no one really knows what the Surface Studio 3 is going to look like. But, stay glued to this page, and if we see anything new, weāll update this article.
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