It’s an IMAX screen for your desk, commanding your attention. Simply placing the monitor a few inches away from your eyes lends urgency to whatever you’re doing: inking a scene, watching a 4K movie on Netflix, working on several documents simultaneously, or playing a game. Interacting with the Surface Studio’s display is an exquisite visual experience. When its display is positioned in a conventional, upright position, the Surface Studio requires very little desk space. In reality, sliding your fingers over the 28-inch, 4,500×3,000 (3:2) PixelSense display evokes the same intangible, deep satisfaction of sinking into the rich leather of a luxury automobile. I may grumble that Microsoft banishes every expansion slot to the rear of the machine. Wireless connectivity is supplied by 802.11ac Wi-Fi and Bluetooth 4.0, and two Dolby Audio Premium speakers hide beneath the Studio’s display. It doesn’t matter that the book-sized chassis packs mobile-not desktop-components: a 2.7GHz Intel Core i7-6820HQ and Nvidia’s GeForce GTX 980M 4GB GPU, plus a whopping 32GB of memory, a massive 2TB hard drive, and a 128GB SSD for caching. I can safely say, however, that the $4,199 Surface Studio Microsoft loaned to us is one of the nicest PCs I’ve ever used.
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