![]() ![]() ![]() It’s all glass on the outer surfaces, looking clean in this lone Glacier (white) edition. ![]() It’s a beauty: almost like an ultra-thin, super minimal, glass-and-metal book that you open to reveal the hybrid smartphone/tablet within. Regardless of the quality of the actual experience, there’s no doubt that Microsoft has delivered some seriously impressive hardware with the Surface Duo. At $1,400, the Surface Duo is positioned as a smartphone that is also a productivity powerhouse, but it fails at being a good phone, rendering the rest of that attempt moot. Along with a poor camera and dated processor, it also lacks modern elements like 5G support, wireless charging, or even NFC for mobile payments. However, actually using the Surface Duo is a clumsy, buggy, and often sluggish experience. The Surface Duo has gorgeous hardware, including a brilliantly-designed hinge that easily folds and securely holds any position you want it in. It can run two apps side-by-side, run one large app across both screens, or even fold back so either screen can be used individually. Named similarly to one of the tech giant’s Surface series tablets and laptops, the Android-powered Surface Duo is a totally unique, convertible two-screen phone. Windows Phone has been dead for a few years now, but Microsoft’s smartphone efforts have been given new and surprising life with the Surface Duo. Keep reading for our full product review. We purchased the Microsoft Surface Duo so our reviewer could put it to the test. ![]()
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