The consumer version of the Surface Go 3 starts at $399.99, while the ‘for Business’ model, with extra security and management features, and optional LTE mobile broadband, costs from $499.99. 
The new Surface Slim Pen ($129.99) will work with the Surface Go 3 (as will any Surface Pen), but the keyboard hasn’t been updated with the charging well. If you have the keyboard from an older Surface Go model, it’s exactly the same Type Cover ($84.99). Neither pen nor keyboard are included in the tablet’s price. One USB-C (not USB 4) port plus the 3.5mm audio jack and a MicroSD card slot under the kickstand means you’re plugging in one peripheral at a time. But the Surface Connect port means you don’t have to choose between a peripheral and charging, although you can still charge over USB-C if you need to. Networking is the latest Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax, which is newly supported in Windows 11) and Bluetooth 5.0. 
The consistency is deliberate. Keeping the form factor and port placement the same is an advantage for organisations that buy accessories like protective cases. Various healthcare and emergency services in the UK are using Surface Go as a lightweight and very portable option, for example, as are call centres where the small footprint, low price and ability to drive an external monitor are key. 
The front-facing webcam is still a 5MP model that can record 1080p at 30fps, but that was already one of the better laptop webcams around, easily beating the 720p cameras in many laptops. The 8MP rear camera is fine for snaps but not a patch on what’s in the average smartphone. The Windows Hello 3D camera is also excellent, recognising us in a range of lighting conditions as soon as we turned the device on. The Dolby Audio stereo speakers sound good for both music and video calls. 
The Surface Go 3 may look unchanged externally, but inside the case, there’s a spec bump. We looked at the top-end model with an Intel Core i3-10100Y processor, 8GB of RAM and 128GB of SSD storage. This costs $629.99 in consumer guise, or $679.99 as a ‘for Business’ model. Cheaper consumer models have a Pentium Gold 6500Y with 4GB RAM/64GB eMMC ($399.99, but may struggle with performance) or 8GB RAM/128GB SSD ($549.99). 
The new Core i3 CPU delivers a respectable improvement on earlier Surface Go models. It’s very usable for mainstream business apps, browsing and video meetings in Teams, but (as noted below) the Windows 11 interface doesn’t always feel as fast and performant as the benchmark results might lead you to expect. Interestingly, we saw better benchmark performance when using the Go 3’s own charger, rather than the (official, Microsoft) charger from an earlier-generation Surface. 
Battery life, as always, depends on what you’re doing. Playing videos relies on heavily GPU hardware acceleration, so it’s actually very power efficient and we were able to play videos continuously for slightly longer than Microsoft’s claimed 11 hours. But with the screen set to only 36% brightness, web browsing, using Twitter, copying files and using Office apps like OneNote and Outlook used up 75% of battery life in just under two hours. Battery saver kicked in that this point and we got another 75 minutes of work done, adding up to a disappointing 3 hours and 15 minutes. For comparison, an original Surface Go running Windows 10 with only 50% charge gave us two hours of work in similar conditions. 
Of course, with a tiny, lightweight tablet like this, you may not be settling down to work for hours, but grabbing the Go for a few minutes at a time and then closing the lid. We found the Go 3 was still a bit more power hungry than the original Go in those circumstances (using up 11% of the battery in 22 minutes rather than 6% in 18 minutes), so you may want to slip a battery bank into your bag when you’re out and about. 

Windows 11

On a small screen like the Surface Go 3, phone apps aren’t out of place (they’re certainly optimised for touch) and the smartphone-style Windows 11 interface may make more sense – swiping over the edges of the screen to open widgets and notifications is more natural on a tablet than a laptop, for example. If you like Windows 11, you’ll like it on the Surface Go 3. 
But the joy of the Surface Go has always been that it’s a real PC that can run standard Windows workloads – just in a tiny, light and slim package. So if you find Windows 11 irritating on a larger screen, you may not like it much better here. 
We found the Windows 11 touch affordances such as a large invisible border around windows, which is meant to make them easier to move or resize, actually got in the way. That’s because they block what’s behind the border – like a browser tab you can see but not close or select. 
Windows 11 may also disguise the true performance of the Surface Go 3. Some of what we initially thought was poor hardware performance was down to the inability to select and open apps reliably with touch. And when we attached the keyboard, focus would randomly switch from one window to another or move the cursor randomly inside text, while we were in the middle of typing. That’s disappointing for a new operating system on what’s otherwise nice new hardware.

Conclusions

Like the previous models, the Surface Go 3 shines as a portable device: it’s perfect for working on an airplane tray table or a crowded train, and for throwing in a backpack or the kitbag in the back of a vehicle. However, battery life seems to have regressed either because of the new Core i3 CPU or Windows 11.  
The high-quality 220ppi PixelSense screen makes watching videos fun, and the speakers and webcam make for excellent video calls in Teams. But you’ll definitely want to pick the higher-spec Core i3 model, and unless you’re a Windows 11 fan or really need a particular Android app, Windows 10 might be the better choice until more of the kinks are ironed out. 
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