Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Mobile
  4. News

Early Surface Book adopters report frustrations and bugs

Add as a preferred source on Google

Early product adoption comes at a cost. And, as a small group of Surface Book customers have realized since the premiere of Microsoft’s first laptop on Monday, that cost is often a product that has a few rough edges to sort out.

Of course, not all of these issues are fatal, hardware-breaking affairs. In fact, most of them aren’t, but it’s alarming nonetheless to see such severe issues arising so soon after the product’s launch.

Recommended Videos

Zdnet compiled a list of complaints voiced by forum users, which includes everything from Surface Books being completely “dead on arrival” to “a screen wobble due to a weight imbalance between the screen and keyboard.”

Software issues, such as the reported “random crashes and lockups” are to be expected, but you’d think Microsoft wouldn’t want its customers taking advantage of their one-year limited warranties this early on.

One user called ericspt, of an unofficial Surface forums site, also took to the web to list some of the unsatisfactory experiences with the device. They are as follows:

  • Dell 34″ U-Wide cannot be used with the dock. Screen goes black every 2-3 minutes for 10 seconds or so.
  • Cannot boot with the dock. Monitor never comes on and my Kef X300 speakers just click over and over. Have to boot without the dock, then plug the dock in.
  • Strangest problem is color temp changes on web pages as you scroll. Goes from a light white screen to a purple or yellow hue once you hit a certain point in the page, happens consistently on long pages and easy repeatable. Happens on both the external monitor and the laptop screen.
  • Playing MPEG files on the laptop works fine, playing them connected to the dock will give an unable to decode error sometimes, program closes other times, and plays. After it errors out 2-3 times it refuses to play until reboot.
  • Going to a web page where there are a lot of animations or movement causes a black screen, won’t come back until you undock/redock.
  • Cannot detach dock, says I have to close SearchUI but it’s not a running service that I can find, have to reboot again.

Our Surface Book review went up exactly one week ago today, and our own Brad Bourque didn’t experience any of these issues with his review unit. Hopefully, if you purchased one early, you won’t either.

When Techradar asked Microsoft about the alleged technical drawbacks of its freshly released new system, the company replied, “A small number of customers have flagged some issues with their Surface Book. We are working hard to resolve them quickly and easily with Windows Update.”

Good luck fixing that screen wobbling via Windows Update, Microsoft.

Gabe Carey
A freelancer for Digital Trends, Gabe Carey has been covering the intersection of video games and technology since he was 16…
South Korea wants to give every citizen free, unlimited access to its own AI chatbot
The government-backed service could turn generative AI into public infrastructure instead of another monthly subscription
Electronics, Mobile Phone, Phone

South Korea wants to give every citizen free access to an AI chatbot with no usage limits. That puts the technology closer to a public utility than another premium service demanding a monthly subscription.

The Ministry of Science and ICT announced the AI for Everyone project on July 13. Private companies will build the platform around locally developed models, while a separate AI agent will help people navigate government services. It’s a more practical job than generating emails or settling arguments nobody wanted to research themselves.

Read more
Falling in love with a chatbot is now off limits for kids in China
The crackdown targets emotional AI relationships as regulators worry about the country's record low birthrate.
Replika AI companion app on an iPhone in hand

Ever since AI chatbots arrived on the scene, there has been one aspect that has worried lawmakers and experts a lot: humans forming emotional connections with chatbots. There have been plenty of cases where over-reliance on these AI companions or partners has resulted in medical emergencies, lost lives, and triggered multiple lawsuits against the likes of OpenAI and Meta.

China cracks down on AI companion apps

Read more
Russian hackers keep finding their way into critical networks through neglected routers
A multinational warning says outdated firmware, weak passwords, and insecure settings are giving state-backed attackers an easy opening
A Wi-Fi router next to a laptop.

Russian state-backed hackers have spent more than a decade exploiting a stubborn weakness in critical infrastructure networks. Organizations are still leaving poorly configured and outdated routers exposed to the internet.

In a joint cybersecurity advisory, the NSA, CISA, FBI, and international partners warn that hackers linked to Center 16 of Russia’s Federal Security Service are continuing to target vulnerable networking equipment. Energy, healthcare, and government networks are among the sectors facing the highest risk.

Read more