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dimanche 6 février 2022

OnePlus 10 Pro Camera Review and Shootout: Fast and accurate clicker with a great camera app

OnePlus’s main series of phones have always been known for having fast, zippy software, top-tier SoCs, and great build quality. For half a year in 2019, it even had the best phone screen on the market (the awesome OnePlus 7 Pro). But having a tip-top camera that could at least make a claim as being the best on the market is a feat that has never been achieved by a OnePlus device. In its early years, the cameras needed work, while recently, the competition has zoomed past. Beginning last year, the company began pushing more in that direction with a highly publicized partnership with Swedish camera maker Hasselblad, and this year’s OnePlus 10 Pro offers “gen two” of this collaboration. I already did an overall hands-on of the OnePlus 10 Pro which remains China-only so far, but let’s dive deeper into the new camera system, and see how it stacks up against some existing top camera phones. Can the OnePlus 10 Pro crack into XDA’s Best Smartphone Camera list?

The OnePlus 10 Pro along with iPhone 13 Pro, Vivo X70 Pro Plus, Huawei P50 Pocket, Google Pixel 6 Pro and Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra

OnePlus 10 Pro Specifications: Click to expand

OnePlus 10 Pro Specifications

Specification OnePlus 10 Pro
Build
  • Aluminum mid-frame, Glass back
Dimensions & Weight 163 x 73.9 x 8.55 mm
Display
  • 6.7-inch QHD+ 120Hz Fluid AMOLED
  • Second-gen LTPO calibration: 1Hz to 120Hz
SoC Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 1
RAM & Storage
  • Up to 12GB LPDDR5 RAM
  • Up to 256GB UFS 3.1 storage
Battery & Charging
  • 5,000 mAh
  • 80W SuperVOOC wired fast charging
  • 50W AirVOOC wireless fast charging
  • Reverse wireless charging support
Security In-display fingerprint sensor
Rear Camera(s)
  • Primary: 48MP, Sony IMX789
  • Secondary: 50MP, Ultra-wide angle, Samsung S5KJN1SQ03, 150° FoV
  • Tertiary: 8MP, OmniVision OV08A19
Front Camera(s) 32MP, Sony IMX615
Port(s) USB Type-C 3.1
Audio Dual Stereo Speakers
Connectivity
  • NFC
  • Bluetooth 5.2
Software
  • China: ColorOS 12.1 based on Android 12
  • Global: OxygenOS 12 based on Android 12
Other Features
  • Alert Slider
  • X-axis Linear Motor

About this Hands-On: This camera review article was written after a week of testing a China retail unit of the OnePlus 10 Pro on loan from Trinity Electronics, a retailer based in Hong Kong. Neither Trinity nor OnePlus had any input in this article.

Camera Hardware

While the OnePlus 10 Pro’s camera module got an eye-catching new look, the hardware inside is similar to last year’s OnePlus 9 Pro: it’s a triple camera system headlined by a 48MP, f/1.8, 1/1.43-inch main camera; an 8MP, f/2.4 telephoto zoom lens with 3.3x optical zoom; and a 50MP, f/2.2 ultra-wide camera. The sensors of the main and zoom lens are identical to the OnePlus 9 Pro, so the only difference is the 10 Pro uses a different ultra-wide sensor. This ultra-wide lens is a Samsung JN1 sensor with a really wide 150-degree field-of-view, but it’s arguably an inferior sensor to its counterpart in the OnePlus 9 Pro due to having a smaller image sensor size.

OnePlus 10 Pro camera module

Still, the camera hardware isn’t everything — software image processing is becoming increasingly more important than hardware, as Google and Apple would attest.

OnePlus 10 Pro: Camera App Overview

The model of OnePlus 10 Pro I tested was the China retail model which runs ColorOS (the version hitting international markets later may run on OxygenOS-ColorOS), and the whole phone feels like an OPPO device, except in the camera app, where it still retains some OnePlus touches, such as the Hasselblad-inspired orange shutter button introduced in the OnePlus 9 series.

OnePlus 10 Pro camera app

I’ve always found the OnePlus camera app to be one of the more intuitive camera apps in Android, as it’s less overly crowded and complicated like Vivo’s, and is easy to operate with one hand unlike Huawei’s. I particularly like the fact that OnePlus’s camera app has always had a smooth, almost iPhone-like zoom dial, and this returns here in the 10 Pro. When I drag the zoom dial up and down rapidly to zoom in and out, the camera viewfinder keeps up and switches between lenses in a manner that is almost as smooth as the iPhone’s zoom dial. This is a far cry from Xiaomi or Samsung phones, where there’s a split-second hiccup anytime I zoom out to the ultra-wide lens. This speediness carries over to the shutter speed, as I find the OnePlus 10 Pro’s shutter response is faster than the Galaxy S21 Ultra or Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra, both of which exhibit a slight shutter lag.

The OnePlus camera app is one of the more intuitive camera apps in Android, as it's less overly crowded and complicated, and is easy to operate with one hand

The camera app interface is kept simple: there are only four camera modes to swipe through: “Photo,” “Portrait,” “Video,” and Night. All the other modes are in the “More” section, which shooting modes such as “Time-Lapse,” “Pano,” “Dual-View Video.” These are self-explanatory — there’s also a “150-Degree” mode which unleashes the new ultra-wide sensor’s extremely wide FoV (more on this later in the photo sample section), and XPan, which shoots in a 65:24 aspect ratio that resembles old Hasselblad cameras.

oneplus 10 pro camera app oneplus 10 pro camera app oneplus 10 pro camera app

There’s also an excellent “Movie” mode which is just manual mode for video recording. This gives the camera app granular control over most camera settings from ISO to white balance to shutter speed. I particularly like the excellent manual focus that lets the phone pull off rack focus.

oneplus 10 pro camera app oneplus 10 pro camera app oneplus 10 pro camera app oneplus 10 pro camera app

The manual mode for still photography is still here of course, and it, too, is excellent. I love that it even has focus peaking to show where exactly the shot is in focus. There are also a ton of filters in the standard automatic camera modes, as well as the option to set artificial bokeh level in portrait mode. Dual-View video lets the phone record video with the forward- and back-facing cameras at once.

The OnePlus 10 Pro’s camera app can also do trick photography, like hand-held long exposure shots. The resulting shot can be quite good.


OnePlus 10 Pro: Photo Samples

These first three shots below are the default focal length of the OnePlus 10 Pro main cameras: we have main (wide) shot, then ultra-wide, and 3.3x zoom. The ultra-wide shot is cropped in (by default, as set by OnePlus) from the sensor’s actual 150-degree, as that is too extreme an angle for day-to-day use.

oneplus 10 pro samples oneplus 10 pro samples oneplus 10 pro samples

The color and dynamic range between the main and ultra-wide cameras are mostly consistent during the day, but the zoom lens tends to be warmer. It’s not a huge deal, but this is one area — keeping a consistent color science across all lenses — where an iPhone does a better job. Even in more challenging shots like shooting against backlight, the ultra-wide holds up well.

At night, the OnePlus 10 Pro’s main camera does a good job of pulling in light naturally. It’s worth noting that the OnePlus 10 Pro does not automatically turn on night mode the way Google, Apple, and Samsung phones do now. But even without night mode, this below shot with the main camera looks great. The ultra-wide shot blows out lights a bit and is a bit soft on details, but still a good shot.

OnePlus 10 Pro, main OnePlus 10 Pro, main

Even without night mode, night photos from the main camera looks great

In the below set, the ultra-wide camera again looks soft compared to the main camera. Perhaps due to the need to do more post-image processing for the weaker sensor, the ultra-wide shot also sees a drastic color shift, as the denim jacket suddenly looked bright blue compared to the other two images.

oneplus 10 pro sample oneplus 10 pro sample oneplus 10 pro sample

But if you want a shot to look punchier at night, with fewer areas drenched in darkness, you will need to turn on night mode. This is particularly true for the ultra-wide camera.

In really low light conditions, like the shot below, you can see the OnePlus 10 Pro camera really struggled without night mode, blowing out the lights from outside the window while showing a lot of noise. I wish OnePlus would automatically turn on the night mode for users in such extreme lighting conditions.

As mentioned, the OnePlus 10 Pro’s ultra-wide camera actually has a 150-degree field of view, but by default the phone crops in. You can get the full-frame if you like but images will appear very distorted, like this.

However, you can jump into most photo editing apps and correct distortion. I did so on Adobe Lightroom.

Fixing the distorted fisheye effect in Lightroom Fixing the distorted fisheye effect in Lightroom

And the end result is a really wide shot that can achieve a sweeping panoramic-like view. However, image sharpness takes a major hit. I’m not sure it’s worth it to shoot in this mode.

oneplsu 10 pro sample

OnePlus 10 Pro 150-degree shot, adjusted for distortion.

Zooming

The OnePlus 10 Pro can do optical zoom at 3.3x and digital zoom up to 30x. At max zoom level, the shot is soft and noisy, but 10x zoom is quite usable.

Selfies

The OnePlus 10 Pro has a 32MP front-facing shooter using Sony’s IMX615. I must admit, selfies have never been my thing, but I’m happy with the OnePlus 10 Pro’s selfie cameras, as it doesn’t try to beautify my face automatically the way many other Asian phone OEMs do.

OnePlus 10 Pro selfie camera OnePlus 10 Pro selfie camera OnePlus 10 Pro selfie camera

Videos

The OnePlus 10 Pro can record video up to 8k/30 but I stuck with the default 4k/30 option. Stabilization is solid, and the video can switch to the ultra-wide lens with only minor stutters, but zooming in the video is underwhelming for a flagship, as footage at 10x zoom looks bad.

Here’s the aforementioned rack focus achieved using the OnePlus 10 Pro’s “Movie” (aka manual video) mode.

And here’s the OnePlus 10 Pro’s bokeh video in action. As you can see, the bokeh effects look very unrealistic with a lot of clipping, but the effect can be lowered.

Here are more photos captured by the OnePlus 10 Pro during my days of testing.

OnePlus 10 Pro


OnePlus 10 Pro camera vs Apple iPhone 13 Pro, Google Pixel 6 Pro, and Vivo X70 Pro Plus

Since the OnePlus 10 Pro is one of the very first 2022 flagships, there aren’t many other 2022 flagships against which to compare, so I did the next best thing and compared to OnePlus 10 Pro’s cameras against the Google Pixel 6 Pro, iPhone 13 Pro, and a couple of other phones.

In the below set we can see all three phones captured the color-rich building with great vibrancy and detail. The Pixel 6 Pro’s shot is brighter overall, particularly if you look inside the staircase.

oneplus 10 pro sample oneplus 10 pro sample pixel photo samples pixel photo samples iphone photo samples iphone photo samples

For the most part, all these shots look great and will appear similar on Instagram or other social media platforms. But if we want to pixel peep and zoom in 100%, we can spot some deviations.

OnePlus 10 pro sample pixel sample iphone sample OP10 Pro pro sample pixel 6 sample iphone sample

We can see the Pixel’s shot has an over-processed look once we zoom in, while the iPhone and OnePlus 10 Pro’s shots would rather keep noise and shadows instead of over-digitalizing the shot.

In this next set, we can see the OnePlus 10 Pro’s color science is somewhere between the iPhone 13 Pro’s overly warm and realistic processing and the Vivo X70 Pro Plus’s crazy HDR. Vivo’s ultra-wide shot is the only one that does not blow out the city street lights, but it can also look a bit over-processed. Almost fake.

I shared these shots to social media and quite a few thought the OnePlus 10 Pro’s shot found the happy medium. However, the color shift between the main and ultra-wide camera is the most drastic in the OnePlus 10 Pro, which is a rather far cry from the parity that the OnePlus 9 Pro saw. Moving on to the aforementioned very challenging shot (a dark apartment with a burst of harsh lights coming from a computer monitor and outside streets), we can see that, with night mode on, the OnePlus 10 Pro’s shot is arguably the best balanced of the bunch. It’s the only shot, for example, not to blow out the monitor’s colors. It’s worth mentioning that both Apple and Google turned on night mode automatically, while the OnePlus 10 Pro needed me to manually switch it on.

op10 pro camera sample pixel camera sample camera sample

If we pixel peep at 100% crop, we can see that all three shots at full of noise as expected, the Pixel 6 Pro’s shot may have retained the most details.

For zoom shots, I tried a night set with all three phones at their default optical zoom. The iPhone’s 3x telephoto zoom is still the best for portraits, as it exhibits a shallow depth of field. I may have accidentally stepped closer in between photos hence why the iPhone’s 3x crop seems closer than the Pixel 6 Pro’s 4x crop.

oneplus 10 pro sample Pixel zoom sample iphone zoom sample

Here’s another set of optical zoom shots with all three cameras.

zoom sample zoom sample zoom sample

Conclusion: OnePlus 10 Pro’s cameras can hold its own against the top dogs — from 2021

Overall I’m happy with the OnePlus 10 Pro’s camera performance. I still think the Vivo X70 Pro Plus and Google Pixel 6 Pro are superior cameras all around due to having a better ultra-wide and zoom lens, but the OnePlus 10 Pro’s main camera isn’t losing to these two by much. I’m also quite happy with the OnePlus 10 Pro’s video capabilities. However, the ultra-wide camera is inferior to those seen in top flagships, and in quality, it is a step down from the OnePlus 9 Pro which had an ultra-wide camera that could hold its own against the main camera.

oneplus 10 pro

One important thing to note is I’m testing the OnePlus 10 Pro against, technically speaking, 2021 flagships. This year’s premium slabs with new camera innovations will hit the market very soon, such as the Galaxy S22 Ultra, OPPO Find X5 Pro, etc. Will the OnePlus 10 Pro compete as well against those cameras? We will have to wait and see. For now, this OnePlus 10 Pro system is intuitive and fun to shoot with.

The post OnePlus 10 Pro Camera Review and Shootout: Fast and accurate clicker with a great camera app appeared first on xda-developers.



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samedi 5 février 2022

Surface Laptop SE review: A Chromebook competitor, but Windows 11 SE isn’t a Chrome OS

Microsoft’s Surface Laptop SE is an excellent laptop for students in a system that sees value in the Redmond firm’s ecosystem, thanks to the new Windows 11 SE OS. I know; that’s a pretty loaded statement. The key thing is that Microsoft has to sell schools on Windows, and the unique value propositions that the OS can provide that can’t be offered by Chrome OS. Otherwise, Chrome OS still has some obvious benefits when it comes to speed on lower-end hardware.

And indeed, Windows 11 SE is absolutely not Chrome OS but with Microsoft services. I’ve long thought that would be a solution for the company. A Chromium OS fork that used Edge instead of Chrome, OneDrive instead of Google Drive, and so on. But that’s not what this is. Windows 11 SE is Windows, and for the most part, it’s just a locked down version of Windows like Windows 10 S was.

That’s where the education aspect of it comes in. It’s secure, and you can’t go and install other software without permission. It’s easier to use with apps opening full-screen and taking out various parts of the OS, like Teams integration, the Microsoft Store, and widgets. Those things are fun, but it’s all about simplifying the experience. When you get down to web browsing and doing schoolwork, this starts to make a lot of sense.

And then we have the hardware, which I kind of love. White needs to become a staple in the Surface rotation, as this Surface Laptop SE is just gorgeous. It’s not gorgeous in a flamboyant way, like you’d see in an HP Spectre x360 or something. It’s just got a clean and sleek design, all while making sense for younger users with plastic hardware that can withstand a drop.

    Surface Laptop SE
    The Surface Laptop SE is the hero device for Microsoft's Windows 11 SE OS, which is aimed at K-8 students.

      Features:

      Pros:

      Cons:

Navigate this review:

Surface Laptop SE pricing and availability

The Surface Laptop SE is available now, and it starts at $249.99. However, it’s not easily available to everyone. This PC is aimed at the educational market, so if you check out the listing on the Microsoft Store, it’s going to tell you that you need to contact a Microsoft education solutions expert.

There are a couple things to note here. First of all, that base price is not for the unit that Microsoft sent us for review. The base model has a Celeron N4020, 4GB RAM, and 64GB eMMC, whereas this review unit has a CPU with double the cores, double the RAM, and double the storage.

The other thing to note is that the price tag isn’t real. Any time you’re buying an educational PC or a business PC, you’ll be dealing with bulk discounts and such. That’s why you’re being directed toward a sales specialist for it. Sure, you can buy a Surface Laptop SE on your own as a personal laptop, but that’s not really what it’s for.

Surface Laptop SE specs

CPU Intel Celeron Processor N4120
Graphics Intel UHD Graphics 600
Chassis 11.17” x 7.6” x 0.70” (283.70 mm x 193.05 mm x 17.85 mm), 2.45 lb (1,112.4g)
Display Screen: 11.6” TFT Liquid Crystal Display Module
Display Resolution: 1366 x 768 (135 PPI)
Aspect Ratio: 16:9
Ports 1 x USB-A
1 x USB-C
1 x Barrel type DC connector
1 x 3.5 mm Headphone/Mic Jack
RAM 8GB DDR4
Storage 128GB eMMC
Cameras, video, and audio 1MP Front facing camera with up to 720p 30fps video
2W Stereo Speakers
Single digital microphone
Connectivity Wi-Fi: 802.11ac (2×2)
Bluetooth Wireless 5.0 LE
Battery Battery Capacity Nominal 35 Wh
Battery Capacity Minimum: 33.9 Wh
Up to 16 hours of typical device usage
Casing Casing: All plastic body unpainted
Color: Glacier
Physical buttons: Power button and Volume buttons on Keyboard
Hinge: 135 degrees open angle
OS Windows 11 SE
Price $329.99

The laptop: The Surface Laptop SE hits just the right points

  • The Surface Laptop SE is the first laptop to use Windows 11 SE, a new OS that’s aimed at K-8 students.
  • It’s inexpensive at $249.99 ($329.99 for this unit), so it has low-end specs like a Celeron processor, 4GB or 8GB RAM, and 64GB or 128GB storage.
  • The Surface Laptop SE is gorgeous and white should be a more common color on Surface devices.

I absolutely love the clean design of the Surface Laptop SE. There’s nothing flashy or fancy about it, but the all-white colorway is minimal and stylish, with a gray Surface logo stamped in the lid. I’d really like to see some consumer Surface PCs like this.

The size, footprint, and most importantly, the weight

  • At under two and a half pounds, the Surface Laptop SE literally takes a load off.

It’s also small, compact, lightweight, and also strong. It’s made out of plastic, and like most computers that are meant for kids, it can handle drops and spills.

One thing that I really want to call attention to is that the Surface Laptop SE weighs under 2.45 pounds. I remember back in junior high school, I had a teacher that predicted we’d all grow up with back problems, thanks to having to carry around what seemed like tons of books in our backpacks all day. What a difference technology can make.

Top down view of laptop

A laptop that weighs so little is a game-changer, and that applies to not just the books it can replace, but other low-cost notebooks. These things, even in this compact size, can weigh over three pounds. In larger sizes, it gets heavier than that.

The display and keyboard are great at this price point

  • All of the core aspects of the Surface Laptop SE exceed expectations for the price point.

Spoiler alert: since this runs Windows 11 SE and I didn’t install any external software, I didn’t do my regular display testing here, nor are you going to find any performance benchmarks. That’s OK though. This is a laptop for K-8 students, so no one over roughly 14 years of age should be using it.

Close up of laptop display

That means that you don’t need some flashy OLED screen. This is a matte, HD display that comes in at 11.6 inches with a 16:9 aspect ratio. The pixel density is 135ppi, which is slightly lower than the 148ppi that you’d find in the Surface Laptop Go. That’s pretty good at this price point, if you ask me.

What’s even more interesting is that it’s 16:9. That makes this the first 16:9 consumer Surface product since the Surface 2 and Surface Pro 2 were launched back in 2013. Again, it shouldn’t make a difference for the kids that will be using this, and what they’ll be using it for.

Top down view of laptop keyboard

The keyboard is pretty great too. Naturally, this isn’t a premium keyboard like you’d find on the Surface Laptop Studio, nor should it be. This is an inexpensive device, and given the price of it, this keyboard is much more comfortable and accurate than I would have expected.

Close up of laptop webcam

The Surface Laptop SE also has an HD webcam, which is nice for this price. Microsoft has been using FHD webcams in the bulk of its Surfaces since 2014, but given the price point, 720p is what we’re getting here.

Performance and battery life

Performance on the Surface Laptop SE is surprisingly good, and so is battery life. I set the power controls to best performance, something I felt was necessary for something with a Celeron N4120, and I really don’t end up with any noticeable lag.

That doesn’t mean that you as a consumer should buy one and install Windows 11 Home on it. You won’t have the same experience, because it’s Windows 11 SE that’s making the change here. Basically, the OS isn’t running unnecessary background tasks.

Screenshot of Windows 11 SE

While I wasn’t able to run any proper benchmarks, here’s an experiment you can try at home on a Windows 11 PC. Do into Task Manager and take a look at all of the processes that are running. You’ll find a bunch of processes from Widgets, even if you’ve never used them before, and Microsoft Teams is using up system resources as well. On top of that, just take a look at the background processes from apps that you didn’t even know were running.

I really think that’s where the key performance enhancements from Windows 11 SE come from. There are no widgets and there is no Teams integration. Apps need to be approved by an admin, so you’re not running anything that’s not necessary, and that means nothing is running without you knowing it.

It’s still worth remembering that the review unit sent out is a higher end $329.99 configuration, with a Celeron N4120, 8GB RAM, and 128GB eMMC storage. The $249.99 base model comes with a Celeron N4020, which is dual-core instead of quad-core, 4GB RAM, and 64GB eMMC. This is a really big difference.

I also couldn’t run my usual battery report because you also can’t open a command prompt in Windows 11 SE. That’s right; you don’t get any of the utilities that you’re used to like the Registry Editor and more. I’m comfortable saying that the Surface Laptop SE will last through a whole school day though, even with power settings set to best performance.

This is also considering that the K-8 student isn’t doing power0intensive tasks. They won’t be doing photo or video editing, or probably even coding. This is something that’s great for taking notes in class, virtual classes with Teams or Zoom, writing reports, and so on.

Windows 11 SE: The new version of Windows is a step in the right direction for education

  • Windows 11 SE is a new version of the OS that’s specifically aimed at K-8 students, and it’s only on new PCs.
  • It removes a lot of the ‘extras’ in Windows 11.
  • It opens apps to full screen by default, saves files directly to the cloud, and more.

Windows 11 works similarly, but different

  • Apps open full-screen by default
  • There are fewer Snap Layout options

Probably the two key things that work differently is that apps open full-screen, and there are fewer Snap Layout options. Starting with the latter, you’ll now only see two Snap Layout options: one for split-screen down the middle, and one for split-screen shifted to one side.

The idea is to make it simpler. That’s why apps are going to open full-screen as well. And before you say it, I can tell you that I asked even before I tried it; this is not a Windows 8 situation. The apps are just opening full-screen by default. After that, everything works normally, so you can do whatever you want. Even Calculator opens full-screen though, which is a bit weird.

It’s all about making Windows 11 easier to use. The general idea is that it should be so easy and intuitive that a kindergartner can pick it up and use it. Whether or not it succeeds at that isn’t something I can answer with authority.

Windows 11 SE is made for the cloud

  • Files automatically save to the cloud be default, making it easier for kids to switch between devices.

By default, files being downloaded or saved go straight to the cloud. This is how it should be on all PCs, as it makes it easier to switch between devices. For kids using a Surface Laptop SE, they can pick up where they left off on their virus-ridden home laptop, and all of their files are right there.

Like I said, this is how it should be. I’ve used OneDrive as my file system since it was integrated into the OS with Windows 8.1. But to be clear, nothing crazy is going on here. It’s really just Known Folders backup.

Angled view of open laptop

You’ll find that a lot of what’s happening in Windows 11 SE is just not turning off defaults. For example, if you open a JPEG file from File Explorer, the OS doesn’t ask you what app you want to use to open it anymore. It just uses Photos. You can change the defaults as normal, of course.

Since the student isn’t the one setting up the PC, obviously Known Folders backup is turned on by default. That means that it’s going to look like you’re saving it to the Downloads folder, and you are, but that’s also being saved to OneDrive.

One thing that is noticeably different is that in File Explorer, you won’t see the C: drive or This PC. You’ll pretty much just see Quick Access and OneDrive, the former of which only provides access to those known folders like Documents, Downloads, and Pictures.

There’s a lot that’s stripped out of Windows 11 SE

  • Windows 11 SE doesn’t have a Microsoft Store, Teams integration, Widgets, and more.

There’s a lot that’s stripped out of the OS here, and there are several reasons for it. These include security, performance, ease of use, and more. There’s no Microsoft Store, Widgets, or even Teams integration in Windows 11 SE, and as mentioned in the performance section, that just means fewer background processes.

It also means that you can’t go and install external apps on your own. You won’t be grabbing untrustworthy software here, or any software that’s not approved.

Rear view of open laptop

There’s also a Windows 10 S element to a lot of it. If you try to open an executable file, it will tell you that it doesn’t support that. And you’ll notice that that goes for system apps too. Things like the Registry Editor, Control Panel, command prompt, and more still exist, but Windows 11 SE won’t let you open them. They even come up in Windows search results.

One other thing I want to note is that Windows 11 SE doesn’t come with Microsoft’s bloatware. What I mean by that is all of the crap that the company loads up Windows with, like Microsoft Solitaire CollectionCandy Crush Saga, and more. This is as vanilla of a Windows installation as it gets.

Who should buy it, and is it good for education?

If you’re a regular consumer looking for a new laptop, I’m not sure how you made it this far into the review. The Surface Laptop SE isn’t for you, just in case you thought that the lowest-priced Surface ever was your entry into the Microsoft hardware ecosystem. This laptop is strictly for kids in the K-8 range.

Angled view of Surface Laptop SE

Who is the Surface Laptop SE good for?

  • K-8 students in a district that wants to stay invested in Windows.

Who is the Surface Laptop SE not good for?

  • Consumers have no business buying this product.
  • Adults or older students that will most definitely need more complex work flows.
  • K-8 students in districts that have standardized on another platform, like Chrome OS.

Windows 11 SE goes a long way toward addressing the needs of K-8 students. However, the way I see it, it does a better job of retaining school districts that already use Windows, rather than converting districts that have made the move to something like Chrome OS. The OS is more secure, it’s faster, and it gets better battery life than a regular version of Windows 11, but that’s still not an answer to why you should choose it over Google’s operating system. That’s a question that Microsoft has to answer.

One possible answer is about what happens when a student gets to ninth grade. For me, that was when I took my first programming class (it was Quick Basic, and then Visual Basic 6 the following year). Before I spiral out of control into a vortex of nostalgia, let me say that this is the age where students might need something more than Chrome OS can offer. This could be the value proposition for raising students in the Windows ecosystem.

As far as the hardware goes, it’s a lot better than I expected. Given the specs, I expected to want to break away from it as soon as I possibly could. That wasn’t the case. Working through the browser was pretty pleasant, although as I noted above, I absolutely had to have the power meter set to best performance. This is a great laptop for schools, as long as those schools want Windows 11 SE.

The post Surface Laptop SE review: A Chromebook competitor, but Windows 11 SE isn’t a Chrome OS appeared first on xda-developers.



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