Microsoft has unveiled its next Surface Pro and Surface Laptop models, bringing Snapdragon X2 processors to the 13-inch Surface Pro and larger Surface Laptop devices. The new models replace ...
What just happened? A week after launching the new Surface Pro 12 and Surface Laptop 8 powered by the Snapdragon X2 SoC, Microsoft has expanded the lineup with lower-cost configurations built around ...
The 12-inch Surface Pro now starts at $849, while the 13-inch Surface Laptop costs $949 and up. Both start with 8GB of RAM instead of 16GB. The 12-inch Surface Pro now starts at $849, while the ...
Here’s the good news: Microsoft is selling a Surface Laptop in 2026 that—once again—costs less than $1,000. The bad news: it only has 8GB of RAM (half what it used to) with last-gen performance. As ...
Microsoft’s budget Surface returns with 8GB RAM configurations, which PCWorld notes can cause performance issues when running multiple applications and browser tabs on Windows devices. Microsoft ...
Microsoft might be cleaning up its Surface lineup. According to Windows Central, Microsoft has stopped manufacturing the Surface Go and Surface Laptop Go lines, with no successors currently planned.
Hardware makers launching new products are in a tough spot with the soaring costs of memory and storage that’s being driven by the insatiable demand of AI data centers. That includes larger companies ...
When the 2026 NFL offseason kicked off, the Dallas Cowboys were linked to Las Vegas Raiders superstar pass rusher Maxx Crosby. However, the Cowboys' final trade offer fell short of the Raiders' asking ...
The San Francisco 49ers have been in the speculation conversation regarding Las Vegas Raiders‘ Maxx Crosby. A deal for the veteran pass rusher doesn’t appear on the horizon before the 2026 NFL season.
Maxx Crosby, who has missed just five games over his seven-year Raiders career, left the team facility after hearing that he wasn't playing Sunday. Chris Unger / Getty Images Las Vegas Raiders star ...
The tech industry’s favorite balancing act is getting harder by the month. Component prices are rising, memory costs refuse to settle down, and laptop makers are scrambling to keep sticker shock under ...