While Microsoft says this is an edge-to-edge PixelSense display, its bezels aren’t as thin as a Dell XPS notebook to warrant that marketing, but it’s still a significant departure for Microsoft. So not only does it have smaller bezels, it offers more screen and maintains the same pixel density too. That means the Pro X has a slightly higher screen resolution of 2,880 x 1,920 pixels instead of the 2,736 x 1,824 pixels on the current Surface Pro devices. The Surface Pro X preservers the same footprint as Surface Pro devices, but the newer bezel design allows the Pro X to cram a 13-inch 3:2 aspect ratio PixelSense display of the same 267ppi pixel density as the 12.3-inch PixelSense display used on the Surface Pro 6. The most noticeable design change is its much slimmer bezels – this is one aspect that has seen little change from Surface Pro 3 all the way till even the Surface Pro 7. With the Surface Pro X, Microsoft is rethinking the design of the Surface Pro by resolving some of the pain points of its previous products (like how to stow the Surface Pen) and merging what the Surface Go first sat out to accomplish (a really portable 2-in-1) with the preferential elements (processing prowess and screen size) of the Surface Pro lineup. Here's what we found from handling the Surface Pro X briefly at the launch event. Of course, the tech-heads will remember that the first incarnation, the Surface RT, was released in 2012, so the extra years added signals the development time since the vision of the Surface and Windows 8 (their first OS designed for touchscreen devices) was penned down. In their own words, this is a product that’s nearly nine years in the making. We’re quite fond of this new addition to the Surface family as it brings Microsoft’s vision for the Surface much closer to perfection than ever before. Since those are still a year away before consumers can purchase one, without a doubt, the most controversial and arguably the sexiest device that you can get your hands on soon is the Surface Pro X. Microsoft’s Surface hardware launch yesterday saw an impressive range of devices launched that caters to a variety of modern work needs – two of which are still in the showcase stage (Surface Neo and Surface Duo) as they are engineering showcases to get developers onboard to take advantage of the new dual-screen devices along with Windows 10X. Microsoft Surface Pro X hands-on: Perfecting the vision
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