this post was submitted on 01 Jun 2026
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Microsoft just dropped a bombshell at Computex 2026 by unveiling the most powerful device ever to bear the Surface name. The newly announced Surface Laptop Ultra is a direct answer to Apple and its dominant MacBook Pro lineup. Built in a deep partnership with NVIDIA, the new flagship laptop runs Windows on Arm and completely redefines professional computing.

Ever since the Surface division came into existence, I’ve always wondered why they didn’t go all in and make an ultra-powered device. As the MacBook Pros started gaining rave reviews from YouTubers, I started waiting for Microsoft’s response, and now we finally have it. Surface Laptop Ultra is arriving in stores this fall, 2026.

Surface Laptop Ultra N1X brings 128GB unified memory and a mini-LED display The hardware specifications for the Surface Laptop Ultra are absolutely staggering. The chassis weighs less than 4.5 pounds (~2kg) and houses a prominent dual-fan cooling system designed to prevent aggressive thermal throttling during heavy rendering workloads. Microsoft is offering the sleek device in Platinum and Nightfall color finishes.

Opening the lid reveals a beautiful 15-inch mini-LED PixelSense Ultra touchscreen. The panel features a sharp 2880 by 1920 resolution at 262 pixels per inch. The screen hits an incredible 2,000 nits of peak HDR brightness, easily making it the brightest display Microsoft has ever shipped on any device.

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[–] Ithral@lemmy.blahaj.zone 4 points 20 hours ago (2 children)

I kinda want it. Admittedly, not before there is Linux support. And I'd like to see upgradeable internal storage, PTM 750 sheets and all that.

But the reason why is I very much think x86 is a bit long in the tooth and I'm down to replace my desktop with such a device. I've been mulling shoving it in my server rack with wake on LAN and using it to stream games with Moonlight since I doubt the x86 emulation is quite good enough yet for things like Elite Dangerous.

Idk, not having an idle power draw exceed 50W is pretty compelling

[–] woelkchen@lemmy.world 5 points 17 hours ago (1 children)

Admittedly, not before there is Linux support.

It's still Nvidia hardware. Fuck Nvidia.

[–] Ithral@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 points 15 hours ago (1 children)

They've gotten better in terms of linux support. Though yea as a company I don't love them, though no chip makers are really amazing companies they all have issues

[–] woelkchen@lemmy.world 3 points 14 hours ago

You'd still be relying on Nvidia's userspace blob for graphics. As you perhaps know, Nvidia drivers are always only one unimplemented feature away from functional parity with Mesa drivers that Radeons and Intel GPUs use.

[–] DupaCycki@lemmy.world 1 points 20 hours ago (1 children)

I'm sure there are people interested in this laptop, and it's good to see there indeed are. Although, they're making it sound like it revolutionizes mobile computing. Perhaps the issue here is with marketing, and not with the device itself?

[–] Ithral@lemmy.blahaj.zone 3 points 20 hours ago

Oh, for sure, the only revolutionary thing here is I could run an LLM on an international flight. That's kinda cool, but not life changing.

The only other thing that's revolutionary is that it's arm, that's where things are going anyway, which can be a huge efficiency win. I've long been wanting devices that can ramp up to several hundred watts of useful power when needed but idle at closer to 10. That might still be a pipe dream, we'll see. But I'm for sure hyped about powerful arm chips starting to show up from not Apple