I have to confess that I was wrong in my original review of the Microsoft Surface Pro X. Not about my 3/10 rating of the product. I stand by that. What I was wrong about was my brazen prediction that the product would be discontinued in a year. I guess that’s a testament to what you can do with a $1.6 trillion market cap.
For those who don’t remember the original Surface Pro X—and I don’t blame you—the big news about this device, the “X” factor if you will, is that it did not run on an Intel chip but rather on Microsoft’s own silicon, an ARM CPU designed with Qualcomm called the SQ1. As I noted in my recent review of the new Mac Mini, Microsoft isn’t alone in pushing out its own microchips. It’s become downright fashionable these days for tech companies to dabble in chip design.
The problem with the original Surface Pro X—one of the big problems, anyway—wasn’t the CPU itself. It’s that the software wasn’t even close to being in place to support it. Yes, Windows and Office had been updated for the new chip, but not much else. The “Pro X,” as it’s known in Redmond, was really at its best when running a web browser. And for that, Microsoft wanted you to pay up to $1,500.



