Surface
61 TopicsSafer Drivers, Stronger Devices
Surface is advancing Windows driver development by adopting Rust, a memory-safe programming language, to improve device security and reliability. Through contributions to the open-source windows-drivers-rs platform, Surface has shipped several Copilot+ PCs with Rust-based drivers, reducing vulnerabilities and enhancing maintainability.1.5KViews7likes0CommentsWelcome to the Surface Pro 4 Community!
Hello and welcome to the Devices Community! We are so glad you are here and excited to have this forum to collaborate and discuss all things Surface. You will find spaces for each one of our products in the Devices Community, so go ahead and take a look at them all. This one is dedicated to Surface Pro 4. I am a Devices Program Manager at Microsoft and along with my team we want to ensure that anyone with an interest in our Devices has a place to share experiences, questions, and feedback. Even more exciting is the opportunity to network and find others with your same interests. In this community you will find customers, partners, MVPs, and our own Devices product and engineering teams in a single location, all with the objective to create healthy discussions that will help us all improve. The comments here are moderated to ensure we maintain a learning environment were arguments and content matter. It's time to start your own conversations and speak up. Be an active participant in this community, it works best when we are all talking. In doing so, you will earn badges within the community. Check them out by going to your profile and clicking ‘Achievements’. I also invite you to browse existing conversations within the Devices and other communites and share your opinion. To get you started, check out this amazing tour of the Surface Pro 4 with Dave Mitchell in our Microsoft Mechanics YouTube channel! One last time: welcome, it is great to have you join us! Nydia1.5KViews4likes1CommentThinking by hand: digital inking with Surface Pen
Keyboard and mouse or touchpad have become fundamental to everyday work. Microsoft Surface engineers have spent years refining those traditional tools to deliver exceptional experiences—but that’s not the end of the story. What if there was another tool—something that added flexibility, creativity, and a more personal way to engage with your ideas? That’s where inking comes in. The digital inking experience on Surface devices is designed to facilitate new ways of working. To understand how a seemingly simple tool can transform productivity, we spoke with Surface MVPs, who are experts recognized for their deep knowledge of Surface devices. They shared how using the Surface Pen supports effective ideation, collaboration, and innovation. To learn how embracing digital ink can enhance your business’s device strategy, read on. Ideas in motion Some ideas are easier to write down. Others are easier to draw. Inking makes it simple to capture both with sketches, diagrams, or notes as thinking develops. Rob Quickenden, Chief Technology Officer at Cisilion, relies on the Surface Pen to communicate complex concepts. "In meetings, I often draw solutions for customers or my team directly in OneNote or Whiteboard, whether offline or in real time," he says. That could mean a rough outline of a network infrastructure, a quick process flow for a marketing project, or notes layered over a shared document to streamline decision-making. Inking can communicate ideas that would otherwise require long explanations, which can increase the efficiency of collaboration. Surface Slim Pen 2 capabilities include a feature called Zero Force inking, which reduces the delay between the pen touching the screen and the ink appearing. A sharper tip and precision tilt detection enhance control. Haptic feedback provides tactile cues that simulate a writing sensation. The added tactile response engages the hand and the mind for intuitive and fluid inking. The result feels natural—like pen on paper, but with the expansive capabilities of digital technology. Digital efficiency, handcrafted engagement: how handwriting activates complex brain connectivity Research using EEG analysis shows that handwriting with a digital pen activates more complex brain connectivity patterns than typing, supporting memory formation and deeper learning.[1] Yet traditional handwritten notes come with drawbacks: they pile up, get misplaced, and aren’t searchable. OneNote Copilot now supports inked notes, allowing users to analyze both typed and handwritten notes directly from the ribbon or canvas.[2] With Microsoft Surface Pro and Microsoft 365, handwritten notes can be synced, searched, and converted to type. In OneNote, you can write meeting notes with the pen, circle key points, and later search for any word—even handwritten ones. Brett Gilbertson, Digital Skills Coach and Microsoft Surface MVP, says, “The most underutilized and overlooked feature on Surface Pro is the pen. It’s essential for notetaking, ideating, and creating—a true thinking tool.” He switches seamlessly between structured notes in OneNote and freeform sketches in Whiteboard. Collaboration without friction: Enhancing remote and in-person teamwork with digital inking In digital meetings, quick visuals help teams align. Inking adds this layer of interaction, turning passive screens into active workspaces. Josh Jones, Modern Work Specialist at Microsoft, uses the Surface Pen during Teams meetings to stay focused and effective. “Nothing is more impressive in a Teams sales call than quickly annotating or scribbling on a PowerPoint presentation to emphasize a point,” he says. In project planning, inking supports real-time changes. During a Whiteboard session, participants can add ideas and adjust flowcharts without switching tools. Everyone stays engaged because the interaction is direct and visible. The Surface Slim Pen button can be set to open apps like OneNote or Whiteboard or launch capture tools. With one press, a user moves from thinking to doing. In-person work benefits as well. Drawing on a shared screen helps explain steps or review feedback without adding to the agenda. Teams can sketch a timeline, update a checklist, or approve changes on the spot, and visual ideas can be captured in real time. Precision productivity: achieving detailed control with Surface Pen The touchpads on Surface devices are designed to be highly responsive and accurate, but fine tasks may benefit from additional control only a pen can offer. The Surface Pen delivers that control, supporting designers, engineers, and professionals who work with detailed visuals. SungKi Park, IT & Integrated Communication Coordinator, integrates inking into both creative and business tasks. "I use the Surface Pen a lot for Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator work," he says. "And for work, I use it for signing electronic documents." In Photoshop, the pressure-sensitive pen refines brush strokes and selections. In Illustrator, tilt functionality creates natural shading. Precision matters in everyday work, as well, whether signing contracts, marking up reports, or annotating documents. Mobility without compromise Work doesn’t happen in one place. It shifts between offices, airports, coffee shops, and meeting rooms. Sometimes, a different input method makes all the difference. Anand Narayanaswamy, a freelance writer and author, balances both touch and pen input flexibly to enable focused work in more places. "I use both the touchscreen and pen depending on the task," he says. "For instance, I use the pen for drawing in Paint, which helps me create stunning visuals." The pen's precision and ease of use make it ideal for quick sketches, annotations, and signing documents on the go. Switching between keyboard, touch, and pen keeps work moving. A quick note in OneNote during a call. A diagram in Whiteboard while waiting for a flight. A contract signed on the spot, no printer required. The Surface Slim Pen 2 makes portability seamless. It magnetically attaches to Surface Pro Signature Keyboard or Surface Laptop Studio, so it stays charged and in reach, providing up to 15 hours of battery life.[3] Technology made human Work takes many forms—structured notes, quick sketches, informal ideas jotted down between meetings. Inking empowers employees with more options to match the input method to the task. When pen, screen, and software are engineered to work together, the experience becomes seamless, whether capturing notes, collaborating on visual ideas, or just brainstorming. If you’re excited by the power of the pen to change how your teams work for the better, Surface provides a thoughtfully engineered set of features to maximize the value of the technology. Discover the latest Surface Pro devices for business to get started. [1] Handwriting but not typewriting leads to widespread brain connectivity: a high-density EEG study with implications for the classroom, Front. Psychol. , 25 January 2024, Sec. Educational Psychology, Volume 14 – 2023, https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1219945 [2] Subscription required for some features. [3] Battery life varies significantly based on device configuration, usage, network and feature configuration, signal strength, settings, and other factors. Learn more about Surface battery performance for details.935Views3likes0CommentsExpert Insights: AI PCs and your technology strategy with Microsoft, Intel, and Forrester
Workplace AI is becoming as common as word processors and spreadsheets. And tangible AI benefits like better decision-making, increased productivity, and better security will soon become must-haves for every business. Early movers have an opportunity to gain a competitive advantage with AI adoption. But doing so requires a strategic approach to device choice that leverages technological advancements early—such as laptops and 2-in-1s with breakthrough AI capabilities. These devices are now easy for any business to obtain in the form of AI PCs from Microsoft Surface. Because they contain a new kind of processor called an NPU, they can run AI experiences directly on the device. Just as CPU and GPU work together to run business applications, the NPU adds power-efficient AI processing for new and potentially game-changing experiences that complement those delivered from the cloud. In a recent Microsoft webinar with experts from Forrester and Intel, leaders discussed how a thoughtful AI device strategy fuels operational success and positions organizations for sustained growth. In this blog post, we’ll examine a few key areas of AI device strategy. For more, watch the full webinar here: https://info.microsoft.com/ww-landing-how-device-choice-impacts-your-ai-adoption-strategy-webinar.html?lcid=en-us Focusing on high-impact roles An effective AI device strategy requires organizations to identify roles that gain the most value from AI capabilities. Data-centric functions—such as developers, analysts, and creative teams—depend on high-speed data processing, and AI-ready devices help these employees manage complex workflows, automate repetitive tasks, and visualize data-driven insights in real time. Choosing AI-enabled endpoints is not just about the NPU. High-resolution displays and optimized screen ratios, for example, support high-impact roles by providing ample workspace for AI-assisted analysis, modeling, and design work. Starting with on-device AI for these functions helps drive rapid value and motivates other teams to see the potential in AI-powered workflows. The phased rollout of AI devices builds a foundation for broader AI integration. Data governance remains central to technology’s advantage Data privacy and security enable confident adoption of AI tools. One benefit of devices with NPUs is that they allow AI to be used in scenarios where sending data to the cloud is not feasible. It’s also important to consider the general security posture enabled by a device. Hardware-based security features such as TPM 2.0 and biometric authentication help protect device integrity, supporting AI usage within a secure framework. With built-in protections that include hardware encryption, secure user authentication options, and advanced firmware defenses, AI-enabled devices create a trusted environment that upholds privacy standards and aligns with organizational compliance requirements. Choosing devices like Microsoft Surface that fit seamlessly into a wide range of device management setups supports faster adoption and reduces risk. Balancing advanced AI features with stable performance AI-enabled devices bring unique processing capabilities that don’t compromise the reliability of core functions. Specialized processors dedicated to AI workloads manage intensive tasks without drawing from the main CPU, preserving battery life and maintaining consistent performance. This balanced approach supports both advanced AI capabilities and essential day-to-day operations, providing employees with stable, responsive tools that adapt to their needs. AI-driven interactions, like responsive touch, intuitive inking, and enhanced image processing, further improve user experience. High-quality cameras and intelligent audio capture, for instance, optimize interactions in virtual meetings and collaboration, making these devices versatile and effective across different work scenarios. By focusing on the user experience, organizations empower teams to take full advantage of technology without a steep learning curve. Aligning IT and business goals for an effective AI strategy A strong AI device strategy brings together IT priorities and broader business objectives. While IT teams focus on security, manageability, and integration with existing infrastructure, business leaders aim to increase efficiency and support innovation. Aligning these goals enables a smooth AI adoption process, allowing organizations to leverage AI’s capabilities while meeting essential technical requirements. Strategically investing in devices with integrated security and manageability features, such as remote management of device settings and firmware updates, gives IT greater control over deployment and maintenance. This integrated approach allows organizations to keep their AI device strategy aligned with long-term goals, reducing the need for costly upgrades and enabling teams to work within a secure, adaptable tech environment. Supporting employee workflows with AI tools AI-enabled devices enhance productivity by automating repetitive tasks and giving employees more time to focus on high-value work. Tools like intelligent personal assistants and voice-driven commands support employees by streamlining tasks that would otherwise require manual effort. Enhanced typing experiences and personalized touch interactions improve user engagement, making AI tools easier to integrate into everyday workflows. With customizable features and inclusive design options, AI-enabled devices make advanced technology accessible to all team members, increasing satisfaction and reducing turnover. By enabling employees to focus on higher-level work, organizations can create an environment that supports meaningful productivity and helps retain talent. Proactive IT management with AI-driven insights Beyond the device, AI also offers new capabilities for device management, allowing IT teams to proactively monitor and resolve potential issues. By analyzing device usage patterns, AI can detect anomalies early, enabling IT to address risks before they impact employees. This shift from reactive to proactive management improves device reliability and reduces downtime, freeing IT resources to focus on broader strategic initiatives. Integrated AI security tools also improve protection, identifying threats as they emerge and securing devices with minimal manual intervention. With insights derived from AI-driven monitoring, IT teams can maintain secure, reliable systems that enhance overall operational stability. Crafting a forward-looking AI device strategy A structured AI device strategy prioritizes both immediate and long-term ROI by examining where new technology can have the greatest impact while also enhancing existing capabilities. By acting early, organizations position themselves to gain speed with AI and adopt the latest advancements as they are released. Whether you’re beginning with AI or looking to expand its role, a well-designed AI device strategy keeps your organization prepared for growth. To explore how AI-enabled devices can drive your team’s success, gain insights from experts at Forrester and Intel by watching the webinar: https://info.microsoft.com/ww-landing-how-device-choice-impacts-your-ai-adoption-strategy-webinar.html?lcid=en-us.392Views2likes0CommentsCheck out Surface at Microsoft Ignite 2024
Explore the latest Microsoft Surface innovations at Ignite 2024 in Chicago and online. Discover AI-driven productivity, advanced security, and enhanced collaboration tools in must-attend sessions, hands-on labs, and interactive demos.785Views2likes0CommentsSurface Pro 7 and Surface Book 3 video issues during Teams Meetings
We have just released driver updates as part of the Windows 10 update, which should reduce high CPU usage when sharing video on Surface Pro 7 or Surface Book 3. Your drivers should be updated as long as your up to date with your Windows update. If you want to ensure you have the latest driver, you can check the downloads page here: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/surface/download-drivers-and-firmware-for-surface-09bb2e09-2a4b-cb69-0951-078a7739e120 For more information on Windows and Surface driver updates, please visit Update Surface firmware and Windows 10 (microsoft.com) Please feel free to give us feedback on your experience using video in Teams meetings after updating your drivers. Additionally, for issues with Teams meetings with an external 4k monitor, please check out our troubleshooting page here: Teams is slow during video meetings on laptops docked to 4K/HDR monitors - Microsoft Teams | Microsoft Docs5.7KViews2likes1Comment