iPad Pro vs. Surface Go: Which should you buy?

After the iPad became such a huge hit, lots of companies moved to "improve" on that experience. The only company to make something in this style worth buying today is Microsoft, with its excellent Surface line. But as Apple moves to meet Microsoft in the higher end of the market with an updated premium design, the Surface Go was released to make something portable and affordable for everyone.

Tablets that aren't Laptops that aren't tablets

Both Microsoft and Apple built their respective slabs of metal and glass to be incredibly portable tablets you can connect a keyboard to in order to get something much closer to a traditional laptop experience, though they really don't look that similar to one another. The magnesium alloy body to the Surface Go feels much nicer than its $400 price tag suggests, and tapers inward on the sides to make it a little easier to hold with one hand. It features a unique hinge on the bottom of the casing so the tablet can always stand up on its own, and Microsoft's Surface Keyboard is one of few that sits at an angle to make it much easier to type on. If you pay for a premium version of this keyboard, you'll even get backlighting on your keyboard, which is extremely rare for this form.

Apple's design this year makes the whole rounded rectangle flat on the sides and back, and a noticeably smaller bezel with custom software to ignore your thumb when it rests on the display. This design is a continuation of Apple's move to dramatically reduce bezels across its product lines, but unlike the iPhone, there's still just enough bezel to hide the TrueDepth camera system.

You can use either tablet in portrait mode, but it seems fairly clear by the design of each that most folks are going to use these computers almost entirely in landscape. This trend started when tablets were largely found to be media consumption devices, but with the additional of a keyboard accessory, both the Surface Go and the iPad Pro become capable computers in their own ways. The biggest question, based entirely on the software available and the computing power under the glass, is what kind of computing is best suited to each machine.

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Header Cell - Column 0 iPad Pro (11-inch)Surface Go
Dimensions247mm x 178mm x 5.9mm (468g)245mm x 175mm x 8.30mm (522g)
Display11-inch IPS LCD (2388x1668 @ 264ppi)10-inch LCD (1800x1200 @ 217ppi)
Camera (front)TrueDepth 7MP5MP
Camera (rear)12MP8MP
ProcessorApple A12X BionicIntel 7th-gen 1.6GHz Pentium Gold 4415Y
Memory4GB/6GB4GB/8GB
Storage64GB/256GB/512GB/1TB64GB/128GB + MicroSD up to 256GB
WiFiDual band 802.11a/b/g/n/ac802.11a/b/g/n/ac
PortsUSB-CUSB-C
PriceStarts at $800Starts at $400

Everything about the iPad Pro screams premium experience. The speakers are louder and more crisp than most full laptops with big branded speakers. The ProMotion display offers fantastic colors at a high refresh rate, with the perfect resolution for getting things done in this smaller size. The keyboard is just wide enough for me to comfortably type on all day without issue, and if I'm being perfectly honest I frequently find myself preferring the keyboard on the smart folio attachment to the one on the more recent MacBook models. Switching to a USB-C port opens up a lot of potential features in the future, but the biggest thing you'll find is fast charging through USB Power Delivery and even the ability to charge your phone from the iPad itself.

The Surface Go is great, but it's clear Microsoft cut corners in a couple of places. The front-firing speakers are good, but not great. The face unlock system included in Windows 10 is okay, but nowhere near as sally or reliable as Face ID on the iPad Pro. There's a USB-C port, but very few USB-C Power Delivery accessories will sufficiently charge it. Instead, you have to rely on Microsoft's magnetic cable. And as much as I love having a magnetic power adaptor and regularly shake my fist at Apple for ditching its MagSafe tech, the convenience of having everything "just work" with USB-C is the future I want to live in. And yeah, even the cameras on the Surface Go aren't as good as the ones on the iPad Pro.

Apple has made a very superior tablet with an experience you could easily use as a laptop for some things if you buy the keyboard.

So why am I comparing a $400 tablet to an $800 tablet? Because the stuff Microsoft gets right with the Surface Go almost makes the iPad Pro not worth it for me in a couple of use cases. For starters, the combination of keyboard and hinge on the Surface Go make it much easier to use no matter where or how I am sitting, while the iPad Pro only really works for me when I'm sitting fully upright. I can expand storage with the MicroSD card slot, and plug in my nice studio headphones with the 3.5mm jack. But the main attraction is the Surface Go Signature Type Cover, a backlit keyboard that sits at a comfortable angle and feels incredible to use in every setting. It also has a nice track pad, which isn't a huge deal when I have a nice touch screen so close but is a welcome feature when I still do most of my day-to-day browsing in an actual browser instead of individual news and information apps. It's also $50 cheaper than the $180 iPad Pro Folio Keyboard, which doesn't offer anywhere near as nice an experience.

When I plug a USB accessory into my Surface Go, I know exactly what is going to happen and can count on it to work the way I want it to. If I choose to enable full Windows 10 on my Surface Go, I get access to everything. I can have the full windowed computing experience, with all of the triumphs and sacrifices that entails. With my Surface Go, I can play Assassin's Creed Odyssey through Project Stream on Chrome or pair an Xbox One controller and play Portal on my Steam account. I can unzip a file my colleague sent me, or change the names on a batch of photos I've edited for this very article. I can also run too many browser tabs and chug this little machine down to an almost standstill, because that's what Desktop Operating Systems do when unmanaged. This is clearly not the experience for everyone, which is why Microsoft makes it very easy to disable this "Full OS" experience and return to something admittedly closer to a mobile experience.

And it's worth pointing out that while iOS is not really made for that "Full OS" experience, there are use cases where productivity is significantly higher. I may not have full Lightroom or the ability to rename files on my iPad, but Lightroom CC can process batches of photos much faster on here than on my Surface Go. I've seen 3D modeling professionals design ridiculously complex structures in minutes with their fingertips, and the Windows 10 equivalent of this experience just can't offer the same promise. And then there's the Apple Pencil, which is supported by hundreds more apps than the largely equivalent Surface Pen.

Put another way, Apple has made a very superior tablet with an experience you could easily use as a laptop for some things if you buy the keyboard. But if you try to use this as your only computer, you're not going to get too far before you're disappointed. Microsoft has made an excellent small laptop it says is a tablet, but you really have to buy the keyboard to complete the thought because it's not really a great tablet.

Which of these tablets should you buy? It really does depend entirely on you. If you want the best possible creation and consumption tablet, and you've got the cash, the iPad Pro is an exceptional piece of technology and you'll be very happy with it for quite a while. But if you're not fully invested in the Apple ecosystem and you still occasionally need that traditional Desktop OS experience and feature set, you'll find yourself much happier with the flexibility afforded by the Surface Go.

Russell Holly

Russell is a tech nerd who chases the best of everything, from phones to game consoles to laptops and everything glowing or beeping. He's the Managing Editor of gaming content for Mobile Nations and can be found contributing to all of the Mobile Nations sites. Reach out on Twitter!