![]() As of right now, Microsoft is only going to offer the Surface 7 Pro Plus to enterprise and education customers. ![]() Microsoft’s decision to refresh the hardware rather than replace the Pro 7 with a “Surface Pro 8” was more for businesses to keep its form factor consistent. At the same time, the TDM (Thermal Design Model) was updated, which allowed for a slightly larger battery to fit in the same amount of space. Wi-Fi models will offer support for a microSDXC card while the LTE model simply replaces the expansion slot in favor of a nanoSIM card slot.Īs per The Verge, Microsoft’s hardware team totally flipped the internals of the Surface Pro 7 in order to make the SSD component removable. Finally, a maxed out Core i7 (1165G7) model with 32GB RAM + 1TB SSD will run $2799. This model runs $1149 and is equipped with a Qualcomm Snapdragon X20 LTE modem – so no 5G. The Core i3 (1115G4) model starts at $899 and comes with 8GB RAM + 128GB SSD while the Core i5 (1135G7) model is the only one that comes with an LTE-enabled option. Intel’s 11th Generation processers power the Surface 7 Pro Plus. The battery life is now rated for 15 hours of mixed use (the Surface Pro 7 was rated at 10.5 hours) thanks to a larger 50.4Wh battery (versus the 7 Pro’s 46.5 Wh one) and the improved efficiency of the new Intel Core processors. The display is the same 12.3-inch PixelSense display and you still get the single USB-C port + USB-A port + 3.5mm headphone jack, and Surface Connect port. ![]() It looks exactly like the Surface Pro 7, down to the dimensions, display panel, and placement of the ports, but with some notable changes on the spec sheet. Microsoft’s got a refreshed Surface Pro 7 Plus coming soon to enterprise and education customers. ![]()
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