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Microsoft’s new Surface PCs are getting smarter, pricier, and weirdly good at keeping secrets

New Surface for Business has a privacy trick your nosy seatmate will hate

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Microsoft new Surface Pro and Surface Laptop For Business just launched
Microsoft

Microsoft has just announced its latest generation of Surface series notebooks that are aimed straight at businesses. The new Surface Pro and Surface Laptop for Business models get Intel’s latest Core Ultra Series 3 processors, on-device AI support, improved security, and a lot more to make them business-friendly.

What does it offer, and how hefty is the price?

The new Surface Laptop for Business comes in multiple sizes. A new 13-inch Surface Laptop for Business starts at $1,499 with 16GB and 24GB configurations available now, while an 8GB model will arrive later this year starting at $1,299.99. The larger 13.8-inch and 15-inch Surface Laptop for Business models start at $1,949.99.

Microsoft will pack Intel’s powerful new Core Ultra X7 chipset that is claimed to deliver up to 35% more graphics performance than a MacBook Air with M5, along with more than 90% faster performance than Surface Laptop 5. Those are Microsoft’s own benchmark claims, so real-world testing will matter, especially across battery life, heat, and sustained workloads.

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The new Surface Pro for Business 13-inch also starts at $1,949.99, bringing the familiar 2-in-1 design with touch, pen, keyboard, voice input, on-device AI processing, and optional 5G connectivity.

How privacy is a big focus

One of the more interesting additions is an optional integrated privacy screen on select 13.8-inch Surface Laptop for Business configurations. Microsoft says it works as a software-driven visual privacy filter with anti-glare, letting users activate it with a single keystroke instead of relying on a physical third-party screen protector.

This might sound like a boring feature, but it can be a godsend for people looking to prevent sensitive documents from being leaked in an airport or cafe.

In the announcement, the company adds that every new Surface for Business device ships as a Secured-core PC, with firmware updates delivered through Windows Update. The company is also highlighting memory-safe firmware work through Project Mu, Rust-based drivers, and hardware-rooted protection.

On the AI side, Microsoft is positioning Surface as a reference platform for Windows AI APIs and Foundry, with use cases such as real-time meeting transcription, writing assistance, select on-device image generation, and live translation. Though some features may require specific configurations, subscriptions, or internet access.

Built for IT

Microsoft is also talking up repairability. Nearly every major component across the Surface for Business portfolio is replaceable, with less glue, more streamlined service guides, and parts availability through commercial channels. The Surface Laptop and Surface Pro models also use recycled aluminum in their enclosures.

Just like ASUS’ monstrous flagship business laptop, Microsoft is also leaning on making Surface for Business feel like a safe, premium, and AI-ready.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
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