Surface Pro 2017
The Surface Pro builds on all the successes and failures of Surfaces that came before it, this time delivering the best battery life and performance we've seen to date.
You'd certainly expect incredible performance given the asking price of this thing: £799 for the Intel Core m3 version right through to £2,699 for the Core i7 variant with 16GB RAM. Couple that with the fact it doesn't ship with the essential £149.99 keyboard, the optional £99 Surface Pen or Office 365 and that's over £3,000 for a kitted out laptop in tablet's clothing.
Dell XPS 13 2 in 1
The 2-in-1 version of the XPS 13 can be had starting at $999 (£1,349, AU$2,299), which includes a fanless, Intel Core i5 Y series processor (Kaby Lake), 4GB of memory, a 128GB solid-state drive (SSD), a 13.3-inch, FHD (1,920 x 1,080) resolution touchscreen and a fingerprint reader for securely logging into Windows 10 through Windows Hello.
Dell’s highest-tier model offers the same QHD+ (3,200 x 1,800) resolution found in Dell’s other XPS laptops, coupled with an Intel Core i7 Y series chip, four times as much memory and a 512GB SSD (with the option to double that to 1TB) for $1,799 (£1,669, AU$2,798). Our configuration happily sits in the middle of these tiers and can be had for $1,299 (£1,449, AU$2,599)
HP Spectre X2
The Spectre x2 is still a detachable, so it has the design pros and cons of any detachable. Working in its favor is its portability: the slab measures 11.57×0.52×8.15 inches, and weighs just under 2.5 pounds with both the tablet and keyboard accounted for. With a dark-ash silver finish and copper accents, it fits into HP's Spectre family nicely and will likely fit in well with its other high-end two-in-one peers sitting on your meeting room table.
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