Is Microsoft's Surface Go doomed to fail?

The new tablet-computer is smaller and more affordable than its predecessors. But can it compete with the iPad?

The Surface Go.
(Image credit: Courtesy Microsoft)

When Microsoft took a $900 million writedown on its Surface RT in 2013, it looked as if the laptop-tablet hybrid was yet another ill-fated experiment from the maker of Windows. Fast forward to today: The Surface brand is bringing in a billion dollars a quarter, is mostly well-reviewed, and has even gotten well-known Apple users to ditch their MacBook Pros.

Now, Microsoft wants to transform the narrative around the Surface. Instead of high-end and expensive, the company wants the Surface to be seen as affordable and accessible. Enter the Surface Go. It's small, light, and costs just $399, which puts it well within firing range of other small laptops like the Chromebook, or even the iPad. But lingering questions about the device point to an ongoing problem for Microsoft as a company: It doesn't yet have the ecosystem for the future of computing.

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Navneet Alang

Navneet Alang is a technology and culture writer based out of Toronto. His work has appeared in The Atlantic, New Republic, Globe and Mail, and Hazlitt.