Microsoft smells blood in the water, and it seems to be exclusively gunning for Appleās latest ultra-thin laptops and iPads with devices sporting all-day batteries and ARM-based processors that boast better performance with better energy efficiency.
A new Surface Pro 2-in-1 promises to do everything your laptop and tablet can do, but better. Plus, every big laptop maker under the sun is coming out with refreshed, ultra-thin laptops that all promote major performance gains while saving big on battery life.
The Microsoft Surface 2-in-1s havenāt exactly stood out from the pack in recent years, but that could change with the Surface Pro sporting the Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite chip. The smaller version weighs in at just under two pounds, and the thinner bezels allow for more screen real estate. Microsoft claims the new version is 80% faster than the last generation, and yet it will have 14 hours of battery life in video playback. You also have the option for an OLED or LCD screen.
Thereās also a new Surface Laptop Go that also sports Qualcommās latest chips, but just as last yearās devices got a fair bit more pricey, these latest Microsoft-brand laptops arenāt getting any cheaper. The 13.8-inch Pro starts at $1,000, while the 15-inch goes for $1,200 at the low end. However, unlike Appleās latest laptops, which only have 8 GB of RAM, the Surface Pros have 16 GB.
Thereās going to be new ARM64 implementations of Windows 365. However, there will still be some apps that donāt support an ARM version. The company is releasing a new emulator called Prism that should be able to handle older apps that donāt yet have an ARM version. Still, while you can easily run Chrome or Adobe products on a Copilot+ PC, you could eventually come across an app that requires more effort than you might be used to on modern plug-and-play x86-x64 Windows devices.
Copilot+ PCs Will Run āSmall Language Modelsā
This would already seem like a strong start, but Microsoft canāt stop, wonāt stop talking about AI. A ton of AI-centric software is coming to Copilot, and Microsoft says the new PCs should be able to handle āsmall language modelsā on these Copilot+ devices. Microsoft claims the PCs are 20 times more powerful at non-gaming tasks compared to past 2-in-1s and many times better at running AI-centric tasks, in this case, processing a simplified AI workload. Does that translate into running GPT-4oās voice capabilities on-device? Not by half, but there will be some AI capable of working on-device rather than the cloud. It remains unclear whether Copilot itself is one of those.
Instead, these āsmall language modelsā are supposed to be persistent AI running in the background on these new devices. Two of the big ones to drop this year are Recall, a kind of always-on timeline of stuff you did on your PC, and some on-device AI image generation in Cocreator. Thereās also a live captions feature that should be able to generate text from audio in more than 40 languages.
So the āsmall language modelā is just marketing speak for smaller AI programs capable of running on the device rather than a distant data center that requires quite a lot of GPUs, power, and water to run every day. However, it seems for now that the Copilot chatbot itself will remain a cloud-only operation.
What is the AI Performance on the Copilot+ PCs, and Does it Matter?
Asus, Acer, Dell, HP, and other OEMs all revealed their latest slim, portable laptops Monday in preparation for tomorrowās Microsoft Build developer conference. These laptops will sport either the Snapdragon X Elite or Snapdragon X Plus, two AI-centric chips that are supposed to power whatās going to become a new line of ARM-based Windows PCs. The Elite comes stock with a 12-core CPU that goes up to 3.8 Ghz as well as the built-in Adreno GPU with up to 4.6 TFLOPs on the top end. Qualcomm has made major claims that the chips beat Intelās latest Ultra 7 and Ultra 9 CPUs in performance at lower power.
The chipmaker has even claimed it can beat Appleās M3 chip seen in the latest MacBook Airs and baseline MacBook Pros in multi-thread CPU performance benchmarks. Weāll still need to get our hands on them to see if those claims hold up. However, the companyās big claim to fame is the 45 TOPS (trillions of operations per second) of neural processing performance in both chips in the Snapdragon X lineup. This is compared to Intelās latest AI-centric chips, which could do 34 tops in total, with 11 stemming from the dedicated NPU.
How much that AI capability matters all depends on how much AI is handled on-device and which apps will utilize Copilot+ās capabilities. As a reminder, the last time Microsoft tried an ARM-based Surface with the Go 3, it didnāt go so great, with a performance that really couldnāt match competitorsā or even Intelās chips. Plus, even with the power and efficiency of the latest Qualcomm chips, these Copilot+ PCs arenāt going to be great for gaming, at least to start. Thatās all due to the lack of support from game developers compared to the x86-based CPUs from Intel and AMD.
So, if these devices prove as capable as the claims say, theyāll only really be useful for daily productivity tasks. Thereās nothing wrong with that, but Apple already has its locked-down ecosystem under the M-series chips.
Acerās New Swift 14 AI Laptop Literally Glows With Excitement Over AI
The big computer manufacturers are out in force supporting Windowsā AI hardware push. Gizmodo has already gone in-depth with Lenovoās offerings, but there are also a few surprises in store. The Asus Vivobook series is getting into the Copilot+ game with the $1,300 Vivobook S 15. It packs a 3K OLED screen and a purported 18 hours of battery life. It has a few more self-styled AI features, like automatic face detection to dim the screen when youāre not there and an auto-lock feature.
Not to be outdone, Acer has a new, ultraportable Swift 14 laptop that is so set up for Windows AI that its trackpad will light up when Windowsā Copilot AI comes online.
The laptop itself is a refresh of the companyās ultra-portable line of laptops but with a new AI-centric twist. Acer is set to mark out its AI-fronted PCs with a massive āAI iconā you can find on the exterior cover as well as the trackpad.
What else you get is relatively standard for this type of PC. Itās an IPS LCD display at 2560×1600 resolution and a 120 Hz refresh rate. You can get it with or without a touchscreen. Itās supposed to be available starting in July, along with many other AI PCs.
And Dell isnāt being shy, either. The OEM has not one but five new laptop models, all sporting the Snapdragon X Plus or X Elite. The Dell XPS 13, once dubbed the XPS 13 Plus, now contains the new ARM chip alongside the likes of the Inspiron 14 Plus, Inspiron 14, Latitude 7455, and Latitude 5455. The XPS is especially prominent, with a promised 27-hour battery life. So, if you have no real interest in AI, then if nothing else, the new Copilot+ laptops should let you use your laptop for longer.

