Surface Pro 10

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Surface Pro 10
DeveloperMicrosoft
Product familyMicrosoft Surface
Type2-in-1 detachable
GenerationTenth
PredecessorSurface Pro 9
Websitemicrosoft.com

The Microsoft Surface Pro 10 is a 2-in-1 detachable tablet computer developed by Microsoft, succeeding the Surface Pro 9.[1]

The Surface Pro 10, introduced alongside the Surface Laptop 6[2] on 22 March 2024 is scheduled for release on 9 April 2024, targeting business customers.[1][3] The general public can purchase the device some time in May, 2024.[4] However, due to Microsoft's business favoritism, the consumer version will use the inferior ARM processor.

The Surface Pro 10 is Microsoft's first version of the Surface Pro where the consumer and business model are segregated not just in specs, OS, and color, but ports and features as well. The consumer version uses the inferior ARM processor and lacks a few ports on the business versions (like a smart card reader).

Timeline[edit]

Timeline of Surface devices
Surface Duo 2Surface DuoSurface Hub 3Surface Hub 2SSurface HubSurface Studio 2Surface Studio 2Surface StudioSurface Laptop SESurface Laptop Studio 2Surface Laptop StudioSurface Laptop Go 3Surface Laptop Go 2Surface Laptop GoSurface Laptop 6Surface Laptop 5Surface Laptop 4Surface Laptop 3Surface Laptop 2Surface LaptopSurface Book 3Surface Book 2Surface BookSurface Pro XSurface Pro XSurface Go 4Surface Go 3Surface Go 2Surface GoSurface Pro 10Surface Pro 9Surface Pro 8Surface Pro 7Surface Pro 7Surface Pro 6Surface Pro (2017)Surface Pro 4Surface Pro 3Surface Pro 2Surface ProSurface 3Surface 2Surface (2012 tablet)


References[edit]

  1. ^ a b "Surface Pro 10 for Business: Everything you need to know about Microsoft's flagship tablet". XDA Developers. 22 March 2024.
  2. ^ "Microsoft Surface Pro 10, Surface Laptop 6, With Intel Core Ultra CPU Launched for Businesses: Price, Features". Gadgets360. 22 March 2024.
  3. ^ "Microsoft launches its first AI PCs with emphasis on easy repairs". GizmoChina. 22 March 2024.
  4. ^ "Microsoft debuts major Surface overhauls that regular people can't buy". Ars Technica. 22 March 2024.