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almost 8 years ago from Hanu Man, Wizard & Divergent
The focus on the keyboard is probably because the Surface line has historically had lesser quality keyboards than traditional laptops - they look to really be changing that perception this year.
My thoughts exactly.
Ok, that makes total sense. I haven't used a Windows laptop for an extended period of time in the past few years, but I always notice the touchpad/keyboard not feeling as responsive as the Mac. It's interesting that they focus on this—at least they admit when they had a weakness.
Well the new glass trackpad on the Surface book is almost the same as the Macbook, Windows 10 supports new gestures. Part of the cross license between Apple and MS. I can't stand a Macbook pro just because doesn't have a touchscreen, my toshiba has it and I am faster on doing this just by touch them.
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I think your last two points can be answered by - Windows laptop makers haven't perfected the laptop by any stretch. There isn't one laptop you can point to and say "this is definitely a good buy, everyone will enjoy using this". This is a big deal, a powerful all-rounder that you can purchase knowing it has good support and great build quality.
The focus on the keyboard is probably because the Surface line has historically had lesser quality keyboards than traditional laptops - they look to really be changing that perception this year.
Windows trackpads have been woeful in the past (usually Synaptics-powered things). Microsoft taking the reins and making native touchpad support is a good sign. But yeah, it's another thing that we take for granted, Macbook trackpads are miles better than any Windows equivalents.