INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The laptop has two USB-C ports on the right side, seen here, and a USB-A port and headphone jack on the left
For those reasons, it seems like most individual buyers would still be better off going for the 13.8-inch Surface Laptop, with the new one
only really making sense for companies buying these in bulk if the 13.8-inch Surface goes up in price or if the 13-inch Surface happens to
be discounted and the 13.8-inch version isn't
The 13.8-inch Laptop is also obviously still the one you want if you want more than 16GB of RAM or 512GB of storage, or if you need more CPU
and GPU speed.The new 13-inch Laptop has most of the same basic ports as the 13.8-inch version, just arranged slightly differently
You still get a pair of USB-C ports (both supporting 10 Gbps USB 3.2 speeds, rather than USB 4), one USB-A port, and a headphone jack, but
the USB-A port and headphone jack are now on the left side of the laptop
As with the 12-inch Surface Pro tablet, the Surface Connect port has been removed, so this is compatible with all existing USB-C accessories
but none of the ones that use Microsoft's proprietary connector.
Both of the new Surface devices being announced today.
Credit:
Microsoft
The new Surface Laptop doesn't seem to regress on any major functional
But inflation, supply chain snarls, and the Trump administration's rapidly changing tariff plans have made pricing and availability harder
to predict than they were a few years ago.Though PCs and smartphones are (currently) exempted from most tariffs, Microsoft did recently
raise the prices of its years-old Xbox Series S and X consoles; it's possible these new Surface devices were originally designed to be
budget models but that world events kept them from being as cheap as they otherwise might have been.