Like your Surface? No, you can't (or shouldn't). It's a bad dev


Recommended Posts

I haven't noticed any lag on my Surface. Some apps take a fraction of a second longer to load than you'd expect and the back gesture in IE10 needs fixing (it performs a full refresh as opposed to just using the back button which works instantly and as expected) but I haven't noticed lag. Animations are all smooth, multitasking is smooth and efficient and, once loaded, all my apps run perfectly smoothly and quickly.

I find the comments about Cut the Rope interesting. I initially avoided it because I'd read reviews that mentioned poor performance but I decided to try it anyway and it's fine. The performance of some of the built in apps such as Music and Video is a bit disappointing but I've found better alternatives in the Store for those anyway.

I'm quite happy to put up with an occasional second or two wait for an app to load because that delay is easily offset by the other benefits of the Surface. Besides, MS seem to be releasing updates fairly regularly so I expect they'll iron out any performance issues before too long. IMO there are far more pros to this device than cons.

You are a reporter for Neowin, a tech site, and that's your attitude towards technology?

"If I don't like it, it's crap?"

I don't like how tech companies are treating me and my computer habits during the latest years.

Yes, that is the easiest way to do it. You then have to be sure to navigate the Desktop Windows Update to see all updates and select Office as it is an optional update. If it were a mandatory update you'd get it eventually without having to dig in there, but the didn't flag it as one oddly enough.

BS, you can select optional updates from metro as well. I never had to load desktop windows update to get the office update. Have you actually used surface or are you regurgitating what ignorant bloggers tell you?

BS, you can select optional updates from metro as well. I never had to load desktop windows update to get the office update. Have you actually used surface or are you regurgitating what ignorant bloggers tell you?

Where? I have access to the one at work for mobile dev so I have used it and the only place I saw to do it was in desktop Windows Update.

I call BS. I haven't met a single person that wasn't downright impressed by the Surface and didn't want to buy one after playing with mine.

... sarcasm?

I played with one in the store, it's not there yet. Window 8 Metro, in general, isn't there with the apps yet either. I would have also needed the hard keyboard, which jacks up the price, which makes the whole thing a bit overpriced.

I mean, it's a nice concept, but it's not a magical wonder tablet like it could be.

Where? I have access to the one at work for mobile dev so I have used it and the only place I saw to do it was in desktop Windows Update.

When you check for updates it tells you that there are x number of important updates. Tap on that line and it shows you all updates, with optional updates checked. Tap outside the box, tap Install updates, and they'll install.

When you check for updates it tells you that there are x number of important updates. Tap on that line and it shows you all updates, with optional updates checked. Tap outside the box, tap Install updates, and they'll install.

In desktop Windows Update? As when I did this multiple times the only update that wasn't checked until done manually was Office. As this was a major topic of discussion in the office.

so I have seen iOS "lag" on multiple devices (iPhone 4, 4S, iPad2) - especialy with the Settings, Mail, Calendar and sometimes in the Camera app. I have seen many Apple apps crash randomly but I didn't see these tech-reporters ever writing anything of this sorts for iOS - bias much?

For all these people saying how Surface is not as good as iPad, have they actually used Surface to its full potential? Connect your camera and download photos, print documents, increase storage when needed?

I haven't had a chance to try out Surface in person much but it looks like when reviewing anything non-Apple, these writers start from 0 and then climb up slowly towards 10 whereas with Apple they start from 10 and then go in the opposite direction.

Almost all iOS releases from iOS3 onwards have been buggy intially and patched overtime to be actually usable. The latest Maps debacle haven't stopped these same people from writing glowing reviews of iPhone 5 whereas if Nokia or LG or HTC or Samsung had one minor bug in any app, then they get bad reviews.

In a nutshell - these guys are crap, don't pay attention.

Surface's main problem is that it is not made by Apple, all other problems can be fixed by updates.

I had a couple of issues with the surface. one was the audio in xbox music skipping when the display shut off. a thread was started a couple of days ago on the MS Surface support forums and after a lot of replies, me included someone from tech support said they were on it. today they pushed out an update to fix it. Moral of the story, have patience and let MS know directly via their forums about issues you have. they don't see people complain here.

  • Like 2

I had a couple of issues with the surface. one was the audio in xbox music skipping when the display shut off. a thread was started a couple of days ago on the MS Surface support forums and after a lot of replies, me included someone from tech support said they were on it. today they pushed out an update to fix it. Moral of the story, have patience and let MS know directly via their forums about issues you have. they don't see people complain here.

There's an update that hit today that fixes the Xbox music thing. I never experienced but it's good to know that people who have will get a fix.

... Anyway, the lag was too much and was present everywhere. Once you use the Surface you'll notice the lag without question and it isn't any fun...

you mean once YOU use it. I have yet to experience anything resembling lag on the device. It runs every game I've thrown at it nice and smooth. Cut the Rope, Jetpack Joyride, and so on. Local 1080p video? Likewise. Streaming 1080p video... likewise. The only thing I have noticed is that if you have a lotta apps open it will drop frames when flipping between them if you go really fast. So, there may be issues with some multitasking. But, it drops the frames, so instead of sliding in apps just pop into frame instead.

Outside of that, it's been pretty darn king. But, that's my experience and perhaps somehow I got lucky and got a stellar device. But, their evidently are performance issues for quite a few people as MS has stated a fix is coming. Again... my experience isn't the same for everybody just as yours or others aren't the same for everybody else.

  • Like 1

If you're in love with the iPad, enjoy it and shut up. Why is it Apple fans among all others feel the need to constantly bash every other product there is out there? Oh, wait, maybe it's because Apple does the same thing. Any device or technology that might start to impinge on their empire of mediocre garbage is sued and mocked. So, I guess it makes sense. 1/2 a second? Are you for real?

  • Like 2

Oh no!! Half-seconds of my life will be wasted!!!

I think he has a point, I'm no Apple fanboy but they have the UI and smoothness down to a 'T', same with Project Butter in Jellybean, everything needs to be smooth, have the same visual polish, needs to load instantly. When you load an app on IOS or Android they load pretty much instantly, menus transition and react instantly.

Microsoft is betting heavily on the Surface and even though in real world terms half a second means nothing, compared to the competition it means everything, they are targeting the surface as a premium device and when it slow to react and lacks visual polish it cheapens the product. When 'joe public' look at it they will wonder why its not as 'good' as the iPad.

... sarcasm?

I played with one in the store, it's not there yet. Window 8 Metro, in general, isn't there with the apps yet either. I would have also needed the hard keyboard, which jacks up the price, which makes the whole thing a bit overpriced.

I mean, it's a nice concept, but it's not a magical wonder tablet like it could be.

There's absolutely no reason why you need a physical keyboard for the Surface. It's just a nice option to have if you want to do more than just watch a movie or play Angry Birds but the tablet works perfectly well without it.

I am holding back on Surface RT simple because it is a First gen product. I have no problem to wait for the platform to mature along with hardware refinements/upgrades next year.

But current assumption on Neowin is that if you say something slightly against any Microsoft product, you automagically become iSheep. :(

There's absolutely no reason why you need a physical keyboard for the Surface. It's just a nice option to have if you want to do more than just watch a movie or play Angry Birds but the tablet works perfectly well without it.

Considering it comes with Office installed, I disagree. They're clearly pitching it as a laptop replacement for the average person, which I think it would be perfect at, assuming it cost slightly less and had more apps.

Considering it comes with Office installed, I disagree. They're clearly pitching it as a laptop replacement for the average person, which I think it would be perfect at, assuming it cost slightly less and had more apps.

You don't need to use Office though and I'm not sure they're pitching it as a laptop replacement. I'd say it's competing with other tablets but provides additional options which makes the keyboard optional as well. I've been using mine for the last week and haven't needed a keyboard once but it's nice to know that I can add one if I need to do something that's not suited to a touchscreen. In that sense, the keyboard isn't any more essential than the optional keyboard that's available for the iPad - it's just a lot more useful.

You don't need to use Office though and I'm not sure they're pitching it as a laptop replacement. I'd say it's competing with other tablets but provides additional options which makes the keyboard optional as well. I've been using mine for the last week and haven't needed a keyboard once but it's nice to know that I can add one if I need to do something that's not suited to a touchscreen. In that sense, the keyboard isn't any more essential than the optional keyboard that's available for the iPad - it's just a lot more useful.

Well, I don't see the point in buying it if you're not going to use the keyboard. If I'm limited to poking things with my finger, my phone does fine. This is true of the iPad as well, but considering the Surface actually built the keyboard in, to some extent, I have hopes for it being a semi-useful computing device in the future.

Well, I don't see the point in buying it if you're not going to use the keyboard. If I'm limited to poking things with my finger, my phone does fine. This is true of the iPad as well, but considering the Surface actually built the keyboard in, to some extent, I have hopes for it being a semi-useful computing device in the future.

Oh, no worries, that's a bit different then. If you mean that you feel that you need it for specific cases then I understand why you feel it's necessary. There's a lot that can be done with just your fingers though and it's certainly easier than doing the equivalent on a phone for long periods of time.

I bought the touch cover separately and it arrived a couple of days ago. I have to say that it works surprisingly well considering what it is although I haven't really had a reason to use it in anger yet.

The Surface RT is a pretty terrible device. At $500 it has WXGA resolution against the iPad's QXGA, and the Nexus 10 comes in at $400 with WQXGA. It has the smallest software selection of any tablet out there. The only reason to buy one is because you like having the newest toys and you don't care about whether something is particularly useful or worth what you're paying for it (much like the first iPad).

Any Windows RT tablet is going to be useless at least until 2014. The Surface Pro on the other hand looks pretty good. Full HD resolution and a massive back catalog of software to take advantage of, and pen input to better make use of that back catalog with the touch screen.

The only major noticeable time I notice lag is when I use the Music app. Everything tends to slow down to a crawl when I use it. Heck I can't even get it to a play a song in a decent amount of time, I have to tap it a couple times, and then the action bar or whatever it's called pops up at the bottom and you see the name and the album art just begin to change, it might even switch the play button to a pause button, but it takes like over 10 seconds to begin playing a song, and sometimes it forgets if I quickly try to play a song and go to another app. If I try snapping the Music app with IE, IE has trouble drawing the webpages as I scroll and browse webpages. I've refreshed my Surface, updated my Surface, installed the Music app updates, but it still is a bitch of an app to use...

The Surface RT is a pretty terrible device. At $500 it has WXGA resolution against the iPad's QXGA, and the Nexus 10 comes in at $400 with WQXGA. It has the smallest software selection of any tablet out there. The only reason to buy one is because you like having the newest toys and you don't care about whether something is particularly useful or worth what you're paying for it (much like the first iPad).

Any Windows RT tablet is going to be useless at least until 2014. The Surface Pro on the other hand looks pretty good. Full HD resolution and a massive back catalog of software to take advantage of, and pen input to better make use of that back catalog with the touch screen.

You contradicted yourself... The Surface Pro is as much a novelty device as the Surface RT, if not a hell of a lot more. The Surface Pro weighs 2lbs, it's clunkier, less battery life, etc. Sure it may be as fast as my home PC and will have no lag with the Music app or any app for that matter...but lets not forget that comes with a very special signature price tag of $1000.00. It might be cheaper or more expensive, but there is no way it will be anywhere near the price of $500.00. Which is why I find it hard to compare it to the iPad, this is no second generation Surface that succeeds the Surface RT, it sells alongside the Surface RT, but with much more at a much higher price, it's not going to be better at the same price...

I like my Surface RT, I am just awaiting software updates to improve Windows RT's performance. It's hard to place Windows RT in the market, considering it is trying to be something it is clearly not, but it will get there, slowly but surely it will.

I'll put it this way: Surface is a blatant, unbearable betrayal of the general purpose, open computing platform the "Wintel" standard has been for me during the latest couple of decades. The ARM-based Microsoft uber-**** is unforgivable, for me.

And regarding the ARM-based "desktop computers": I have x86 software archives, I play x86 games, I need x86 software, programs and applications, I won't even consider a "general purpose" ARM device a proper computer because until now, ARM chips have been implemented in castrated machines (a machine that depends on "app store" on-line remote services is a castrated machine, imo) and never in computers.

If the big corporations want a "cloud war" over digital data ownership, I'm pretty much armed already and I won't spare a single bullet against this "mobile cloud on-line tablet smartphone app store" crap.

Its not really unprecedented, there was a version of Windows NT released for ARM, also MIPS, PowerPC, etc... Microsoft wanted Windows NT to be processor independent.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • There is a default resolution setting in Settings > Display that can be changed with a click. You can also change the settings on a per-game basis. No CLI needed. Also, Steam has countless games that are not "[perpetual] alpha/beta games", so no need for the straw man. Plus you can use other stores as well. And console games (e.g. PS5) cost a fortune, which itself more than negates the price subsidy on the system, unless you plan on exclusively playing 1 or 2 games. It's true that you shouldn't buy a system that doesn't support the game(s) you want to play, but I think that's kinda obvious, and applies to every console as well as PC. I don't game in the living room and have no need of a Steam Machine, but there is a clear market segment that would find it useful.
    • RSS Guard 5.2.0 by Razvan Serea RSS Guard is a simple (yet powerful) feed reader. It is able to fetch the most known feed formats, including RSS/RDF and ATOM. It's free, it's open-source. RSS Guard currently supports Czech, Dutch, English, French, German, Italian. RSS Guard will never depend on other services - this includes online news aggregators like Feedly, The Old Reader and others. RSS Guard is developed on top of the Qt library and it supports these operating systems: Windows GNU/Linux OS/2 (eComStation) Mac OS X xBSD (possibly) Android (possibly) other platforms supported by Qt The core features of RSS Guard are: support for online feed synchronization via plugins, Tiny Tiny RSS (from RSS Guard 3.0.0). multiplatform, support for all feed formats, simplicity, import/export of feeds to/from OPML 2.0, downloader with own tab and support for up to 6 parallel downloads, message filter with regular expressions, feed metadata fetching including icons, simple Adblock functionality, customized popup notifications, Google-based auto-completion for internal web browser location bar, ability to cleanup internal message database with various options, enhanced feed auto-updating with separate time intervals, multiple data backend support, SQLite (in-memory DBs too), MySQL. is able to specify target database by its name (MySQL backend), “portable” mode support with clever auto-detection, feed categorization, drap-n-drop for feed list, automatic checking for updates, ability to discover existing feeds on websites, full support of podcasts (both RSS & ATOM), ability to backup/restore database or settings, fully-featured recycle bin, printing of messages and any web pages, can be fully controlled via keyboard, feed authentication (Digest-MD5, BASIC, NTLM-2), handles tons of messages & feeds, sweet look & feel, fully adjustable toolbars (changeable buttons and style), ability to check for updates on all platforms + self-updating on Windows, hideable main menu, toolbars and list headers, KFeanza-based default icon theme + ability to create your own icon themes, fully skinnable user interface + ability to create your own skins, “newspaper” view, plenty of skins, support for "feed://" URI scheme, ability to hide list of feeds/categories, open-source development model based on GNU GPL license, version 3, tabbed interface, integrated web browser with adjustable behavior + external browser support, internal web browser mouse gestures support, desktop integration via tray icon, localizations to some languages, Qt library is the only dependency, open-source development model and friendly author waiting for your feedback, no ads, no hidden costs. RSS Guard 5.2.0 changelog: Added: Feed auto-fetch can now also be delayed while Feral GameMode is active on Linux and startup auto-fetch is skipped when GameMode is already active. (#2265) WebEngine builds can now use RSS Guard generated proxy auto-config (PAC) rules so article/web browsing follows per-account and per-feed proxy settings more closely. (#2273) Generated PAC rules now also cover related subdomains and use Public Suffix List data, so feeds such as feeds.bbc.co.uk can also proxy resources from images.bbc.co.uk. (#2273) Standard feeds can now define extra proxy domains, useful when article images, stylesheets or other page resources are loaded from a CDN or another domain that should use the same feed proxy. (#2273) RSS Guard now asks for proxy credentials when a WebEngine page needs proxy authentication and can fill credentials from the current feed proxy when available. (#2273) Network settings again include an option to ignore all cookies, which clears stored cookies and prevents new cookies from being accepted. Standard RSS/ATOM feeds can now individually ignore cookies while downloading feed data. Stored cookies can now be deleted from the Tools menu. Custom skin colors can now override the feed list article count color separately from feed titles, including a separate highlighted color. (#2275) Settings dialog can now search across available settings and highlight matching controls. (#1754) Standard RSS/ATOM feeds can now optionally be reported as broken when they are valid but contain no articles. (#2039) Standard RSS/ATOM feeds can now override the application-wide feed connection timeout per feed. (#1023) Tray icon can now use a custom background color and unread-count text color, with an option to reuse the generated icon as the application icon. (#1973) Support for more benevolent parsing of Gemlog entries (#2295). Article list can now show when an article was received by RSS Guard. (#947) Feed deep discovery now actually scrapes all links found in the website and checks if they are feeds or not. This greatly enhances usability of the deep discovery mode and discovers many more feeds than before. (#2306) Search boxes now show a small dot when the feed or article list is hiding some items because of active filtering. (#873) Articles now have a shortcut-assignable action to open the homepage of the feed they belong to. (#2060) Fixed: Parallel feed updates no longer crash when multiple update results are processed at the same time. (64cf521) Links in WebEngine articles opened from feeds such as Kill the Newsletter now open correctly instead of being swallowed by the embedded page. (#2272) Relative article URLs resolution was kinda broken. (#2282) Clicking article URL did not work when the URL had "fragment" set. (#2293) The default proxy setting now uses Qt/system default proxy behavior instead of forcing no proxy. (e0263ad) WebEngine article loading now keeps the current feed context, so feed-specific proxy credentials remain available while the article page loads. (fdd0f00) Download: RSS Guard 5.2.0 (64-bit) | Portable | ~ 130.0 MB (Open Source) Link: RSS Guard Home Page | Other Operating Systems | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • This is gonna separate the creeps from the rest of the crowd.
    • "Claude, is our CEO a compete and utter fool by wasting money on AI in this already worthless Teams chat?"
  • Recent Achievements

    • Rookie
      DaviKar went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Dedicated
      HidekoYamamoto94 earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • One Month Later
      timbobit earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      nates earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      462
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      161
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      110
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      83
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!