Going Pro: Day One with Surface Pro

In the first article in a new series, a quick look at the initial setup

My Surface with Windows 8 Pro tablet arrived with a ton of accessories about two weeks ago. As I had previously revealed, my intention was to move to using this device as my sole PC going forward, and this new series of posts will document this transition.

Note: Check out Microsoft Surface with Windows 8 Pro Unboxing for a look at the complete set up I received on loan from Microsoft. I’ll be replacing this with my own Surface Pro when the loan period expires.

Day one is pretty basic and is all about the initial configuration. As I always do with a new Windows 8 PC or device, the first step was to turn on Surface Pro and navigate through the short out of box experience (OOBE), supplying my Microsoft account for sign-in and receiving the familiar customized environment I get elsewhere as well.

I spent a bit of time customizing the Start screen, which I find more relevant on tablets than traditional PCs, and I use the same layout across my devices, which you can see here:

There are a few unique bits to the default software install on Surface Pro. First, it comes with the Skype Metro-style app. I have no problem with this, per se, but I will soon be installing the desktop version, which I prefer.

Surface Pro also comes with a trial version of Office 365 Home Premium, which provides 30 days of access and installable versions of the new desktop suite. Since I’m separately reviewing and writing about Office 2013, however, I installed this software from my own Office 365 Home Premium account, which was previously set up.

Unique to this install, too, is the inclusion of the SkyDrive desktop application, which you’d normally acquire with Windows Essentials. As is the case when you install that suite of applications, SkyDrive quickly updates itself to a newer version, and then I signed in and configured it to sync the entire contents of my SkyDrive storage to the device. (On other devices I’ve configured it to sync only some parts of SkyDrive, but since the Surface Pro has 128 GB of solid storage, what the heck.)

Initial SkyDrive sync takes a while, but there’s no reason to wait. The next step, as always, is to visit the “Always install apps” share on my home server and install the handful of local applications I still use (Photoshop Elements and a few others) and then download and install applications like Skype, Chrome, and Windows Essentials 2012 from the web.

While I was doing all this, the Plugable UD-3000 USB 3.0 Universal Docking Station I ordered from Amazon arrived. But that’s the topic for an upcoming article: Physically replacing my desktop tower with Surface Pro using this interesting accessory. First, however, I have a report about my first experience on the go with Surface Pro.

See you tomorrow. :)

Discuss this Article 16

RJasonW74
on Feb 5, 2013

Go ahead Paul, make us insanely jealous :-)

GoodThings2Life
on Feb 5, 2013

Will you be posting any tips on safely "recovering space" on Surface Pro for the benefit of those who will complain about the lack of free space?

I admit that's something I will opt to do on my own system, since I have my own media to reinstall Windows should I need to do so.

pthurrott
on Feb 6, 2013

Yes, primarily through removing that recovery partition. To be honest though, this isn't a huge deal (for me) on the 128 GB version.

PsychicDave
on Feb 6, 2013

Since the Surface Pro is essentially a PC in a tablet form factor, is it possible to disable SecureBoot and dual-boot Linux on it? If it's going to replace my current notebook, that's something I need to do with it.

Craig
on Feb 6, 2013

A hyper-v for your distro is possible.

baioc
on Feb 6, 2013

Yes, this is possible.

Paul noted this in "Microsoft Addresses Surface Pro Concerns" - http://winsupersite.com/windows-8/microsoft-addresses-surface-pro-concerns

strattao
on Feb 6, 2013

I am very curious to hear what keyboard you are using for your day-to-day usage?

ingenuity1
on Feb 7, 2013

Am I crazy to think that the OS and especially the start screen should look completely identical to my other devices at first logon? While it's true that I may not want all of the same apps from device to device, but the tiles should be there, as well as my groupings in some not-yet-installed way where I can easily click 'install' or 'disregard' on the tile.

kristalsoldier
on Feb 23, 2013

I wonder if I will eventually have to get one of these? Maybe in its second edition. Being currently on the RT, the only thing I seem to miss are things like Chrome and some other basic apps. The worry, of course, is battery life though I expect MS will sooner or later have a fix for that. But by the same count, perhaps MS will also fix the RT in appropriate ways. In which case, I am compelled to ask - particularly to Paul - is it possible (or likely) that over a couple of versions, MS will look to converge the Pro and the RT leaving the space for a pure RT device to be filled in by a smaller form factor (which will also involve dropping the keyboard and including the Pen)?

pthurrott
on Feb 23, 2013

I look at the Surface RT and think, man. If this could have the Surface Pro inside it--that thinness and lightness, and battery life--bingo. But I think that future, smaller RT devices will happen and be consumption only. I don't see pens for those products.

power1000
on Feb 27, 2013

Paul: May I inquire what you are using hardware-wise to get it working on the external monitors. I need to get it working on (3) external monitors if possible. Just wondering what equipment you're using to accomplish. (maybe you're not using more than 1 monitor?)

pthurrott
on Feb 27, 2013
JennCatt
on Mar 8, 2013

Dear Paul, thank you I have been visiting your site a lot recently as I just bought the Surface Pro in Late Feb. I love it. Well it is love hate at this point because I'm a little, um, slow I GUESS when it comes to learning new OS'..... I also got Windows 8 for the desktop. I am an intermediate level user of Photoshop Elements 7. I took an online course at the local community college so I could get the best use out of it, Lots of fun! My favorite thing about the Surface Pro is that it "can" run Photoshop, AND I can play Guild Wars on it. I can't GET Photoshop on my surface though. I still have the disk and serial code. I tried putting it on a thumb drive, but it errors out in the middle of install every time. So then I did my search and found this article. Am I reading correctly? Can I put the program files into the sky drive and pull them over? can you help me with some steps on that? I tried and I'm getting the no-no symbol whenever I drag the photoshop program files over to the sky drive boxes on the desktop.... THANK YOU

Jenn From Oregon

pthurrott
on Mar 9, 2013

I've used Photoshop Elements 9, 10, and 11 with Windows 8 and it's possible that the version you're using, which is a few years earlier, may simply be incompatible. You may need to get a new version of Elements.

JennCatt
on Mar 14, 2013

thanks so much for the reply :-) Probably true. But just now I'm trying to drag documents on the desktop over to the sky drive, and it's NOT WORKING. I have the sky drive open and to the right hand side, the desktop folders area is open and I'm trying to drag individual Word files over..... I'm getting the same "no" symbol I got when I was dragging photoshop over..... Maybe if the file is saved in an older version of Word it won't drag either??? tad bit lame, but I can resave these word docs I GUESS....

davidc86
on Mar 16, 2013

Have you considered an external USB DVD Drive? It should allow you to install old software directly from the original disks. Local stores sell them at reasonable prices.

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