Microsoft Surface Pro Less Repairable Than iPad
Microsoft Surface Pro Less Repairable Than iPad
The Microsoft Surface Pro went on sale last week and the team at gadget repair platform iFixit has already ripped it apart. The Surface Pro teardown reveals that the Microsoft tablet/hybrid is less repairable than the Apple iPad.
According to the company Microsoft chose to glue down any component that could be glued down, making the device extremely difficult to repair or possibly upgrade.
iFixit scored the Surface Pro with a 1 out of 10. The company found that simply attempting to open the gadget offered a high probability of cutting through one of the displays four cables.

The breakdown also found that the devices battery and display were covered with adhesive making both options hard to replace.
A quick examination also found that the Microsoft Surface Pro features 90 screws throughout the deviceâs interior. That number of small screws is extremely high for the device type being examined.
It should be noted that Microsoft has attempted to shove in as much power as possible on the full Windows 8 OS-based device. The companyâs low scores however was based on what iFixit found to be unnecessary steps, such as gluing in the battery. iFixit calls the glued battery a  âplanned obsolescenceâ which is âcompletely unnecessary.â

In comparison the Apple iPad scored just a 2 out of 10 on the repairability scale. Appleâs score actually went down hill after the company attempted to shove more technology into a smaller space.
Microsoftâs Surface RT tablet beat out the Apple iPad but also offered lower-end features compared to the Microsoft Surface Pro.
In the meantime the Surface Pro is touted as a full Windows 8 hybrid/tablet and some users might be surprised to learn how hard an upgrade would be to conduct. Users looking for more than 4GB of RAM down the road might want to wait for the next version of Microsoftâs tablet to arrive.
Do you think tablets and hyrids should be more consumer friendly in terms of repairability?
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