Attaching the magnetic Connect + connector, I love. Pushing in an USB-C connector I hate, especially when need to plug/unplug daily or more. I find the Microsoft proprietary solution more mechanically reliable than the USB-C not to mention the added trip-proof benefit, it won't pull the tablet off the desk when accidental cable jerks happen.
The port and the connectors are poorly designed. The Connector's width is too long compared to its depth- will break easily unless it is made of very heavy duty material. The port has a pair of three pins separated by some gap which is almost as long as or more than the total length of the two sets of pins alone. I have no idea why such a large gap exists which serves no purpose.
If Microsoft, as a very successful software company, wants to diversify into hardware design, its needs to develop that capability well. Hardware design includes mechanical design as well.
Although there are benefits to the surface connect port, the dock is not really one of them imo since it weighs almost twice as much as the laptop's power brick. There is little point in having a 1kg laptop and 1 kg dock.
Bad idea. The Surface connect port is so much better than USB C. It's nearly impossible to find a USB C dock with power and 5 USB C ports and 3 USB A ports. That's what I have available with the new Dock 2. I have two monitors connected, a mouse, and my cell phone are connected too. I connect with one cord. I still have both type C ports on the front of the dock open and both the type A and type C available on the device itself.
I gave my original dock to my daughter with my Surface Pro 5. She loves that her monitor, keyboard, mouse, and DVD drive are all so easily connected with one magnetic cord.
No reason to get rid of it. I love the better idea of making the port available to all Windows devices!
Why drop when m$ could just add more tb3 ports w/ PD support?
The built-in magsafe-like charging functionality is extremely useful. Yes, aftermarket alternatives are available under 30 USD, but saying that there's aftermarket solution so you don't need to worry is kinda like dropping the 3.5mm headphone jack and saying that you could just buy a type-c-to-3.5mm adapter, or dropping any port but tb3 like what the fruit company did and saying that you're now free as never before.
A universal port for everything is definitely good, but this doesn't mean you have to drop any other "old-school" ports.
The problem with just relying on USB-C Thunderbolt "docks" is that I've found the cost-effective ones (30-60$) make the computer work really hard and get hot, make the dock hot as well, and give some occasional lag on wired mouses (extremely annoying). I tried around 5 of them with my X1 Carbon (returned all), and ended up making my own ghetto-dock by encasing all plugged-in cords in thermal plastic (luckily the X1C is flush in ports on the left side), because Lenovo's dock was absurdly expensive, but probably worked a lot better as it has power supply and used both USB-C ports. There are probably great 3rd party powered docks that work with multiple laptop brands, but they're going to be quite expensive as well.
I just got a Surface Laptop from work, and the connect port / dock works great - very secure but easy-to-disconnect port (magnetic), and the computer and dock stay cool. I bought another one for home use for $110 open box. You're not going to find a powered 3rd party usb-c dock (surface laptop now has usb-c on the left side of course), that will work as well as the Surface dock at that price point IMO (or even at normal non-MS vendor price $150 new).
Unless you REALLY need to use the same dock for a Surface and non-surface computer, I see no compelling reason to not go with the connect dock for surface. And if you must go USB-C dock, don't cheap out....if it's under $100 and non-powered, probably will give you some issues (hot computer, not good) if you tax it with external monitors and peripherals.
Put me in the group against this idea. As much as I usually hate proprietary cables, ports, etc. I really like the surface current connect port system. I've used other devices with thunderbolt connections and I would rather keep this. I don't care about universal connectivity. I've got surface devices and don't plan to change that anytime soon, so my docks aren't going anywhere. It may be "nonessential" now, but just because something isn't essential doesn't mean it's not useful and a helpful design. I'd be sad/angry to see it go.
No please. It's very well designed. I have seen laptops in coffee shops suffering from very had fall because of the tight/snug ac connectors. I like that the surface's is easily removable, making it safe from accidental trips. The white LED is cool to look at, too.
I love the connect port, having a magnetic power adapter so you don't have to worry about tugging your power adapter causing you to drop your surface or laptop. Obviously it should be in addition to USB-C/thunderbolt but they should by no means remove it.
Now that they support usb-c with power delivery and display port... they could just support thunderbolt 3 as well... keep their proprietary port for people who already have their docks and are upgrading. Then they can release a next gen thunderbolt 3 dock and widen their market to 3rd party devices.
The only potential issue would be how many PCIe channels are available... but even 2 channel thunderbolt3 would be better than none.