

However, while the screen delivers 100% of sRGB as you’d expect, it can only manage 82% of the DCI-P3 gamut, which is good but far from outstanding. It also has a resolution of 2,400 x 1,600, which goes along with the Surface range’s traditional 3:2 aspect ratio (designed to match a sheet of A4 paper), and the overall sense of the panel is crisp, detailed, and colourful. The Surface Laptop Studio’s display is 14.4in touchscreen offering a fast 120Hz refresh rate. Microsoft Surface Laptop Studio review: Display Where a lot of previous devices in this category have been jacks of all trades and masters of none, you could use the Surface Laptop Studio as a regular notebook without even realising it has other modes. The Surface Laptop Studio shows how much the “transformer” idea has matured over the years. The key thing is that it performs this mode well when you need it, without any compromise of regular keyboard-driven notebook abilities. However, it’s also quite heavy, tipping the scales at 1.82kg for the Core i7 version and 1.74kg for the Core i5 version and it’s nearly 2cm thick, so isn’t the perfect device to hold in tablet form for extended durations. Some detachables are top heavy, but the Surface Laptop Studio keeps all the electronics in the keyboard base, so the screen remains thin.
