


Microsoft Surface Book 2
SKU:201807231-04
$2,499.00
Availability In stock
Usually ready for shipment in 3 to 7 days.
The most powerful Surface ever
Laptop Mode: A sleek, portable powerhouse with up to 17 hours of battery life. Work with professional-grade software on the full keyboard, trackpad, and touchscreen. Tablet Mode: Detach the stunning PixelSense Display to transform Surface Book 2 into a thin, powerful, and lightweight Intel Core i5/i7 tablet you can take anywhere. Studio Mode: Fold Surface Book 2 into Studio Mode to draw and sketch comfortably and naturally. Add Surface Dial and Pen for an immersive creative experience. View Mode: Detach the screen with the push of a button, turn it around, and reattach to share content and presentations. Perfect for watching your favorite shows.
- Hard_disk_drive_capacity:
- 256GB
- Warranty:
- 1-year limited hardware warranty
- Display:
- 15" PixelSense Display, 3240*2160 (260 PPI)
- Battery Life:
- Up to 17 hours of video playback
- Dimensions:
- 343*251*15 mm - 23mm
- Memory:
- 16GB RAM
- Processor:
- 8th Gen Intel Core i7-8650U quad-core processor, 4.2GHz Max Turbo
- Software:
- Windows 10 Pro Creators Update 64-bit
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We’d like your opinion. Rate and review this productRecent product reviews
Justus F.
May 23, 2025, 5:03:46 PM Overall, the Surface Book 2 15" is one of the single best PCs I've even researched, much less owned. It is a pleasure to use, and there was obviously great care in it's design. For being a premium level device however, there are some definite drawbacks. First, whoever decided that there is $400 in value for no change to the device other than an increase of 256 GB to the internal storage needs to reassess that. For us customers, go spend half that on an external SSD (which will be limited by the fact that the USB-C port is not Thunderbolt 3, and no one seems to know if it is gen 1 or gen 2 speeds) and call that good. Second, the device actually draws more power than the charger provides. Isn't addressing that sort of issue covered in first level computer design courses? Microsoft seems well aware of this, and rather then letting the device die they throttle it under sustained load. To Microsoft, either don't market the device as a workstation or get it in line with what you say it does.


