Thanks for putting into words my visualization of the main difference.
Fair enough. I guess it’s more correct to say tablets are better for passive content consumption.
IMO tablets are much better for video, mainly because there are more, better tablet apps for watching videos than PC software. On my Android tablet, I can download purchased videos from Amazon and Google Play for later off-line playback, which is great for long international airline flights. There are no such options on a Windows laptop.
Another vote for the Surface Pro 4. Initially there was a sleep bug (It wouldn’t go to sleep right, or wouldn’t get out of sleep easily), but that has been fixed and I believe it was an issue with the Intel chip. So if you see concerns online about that, that’s the skinny on it.
I detach the keyboard every once in while. It’s great for reading comics (from Comixology on the web, not a separate app). It can be good for taking notes with the Surface Pen when the “laptop” mode may seem too ‘closing off of space’ (I’m not sure I articulated it that great). It’s also nice to be able to detach the laptop if you are just watching Netflix or Youtube and don’t need the keys.
As a laptop its pretty great as well. The Surface Type Keyboard is absolutely fantastic to type on its touchpad is very responsive. And the innards are just as powerful as anything else out there.
Google just announced that later this fall Chrome OS (the operating systems on its Chromebooks) would be able to get Google Play and Android apps. I wonder if this will cause Chromebooks to be considered more useful for content consumption than Windows or Apple laptops.
If your day-to-day laptop needs are browsing, writing emails and (light) data entry tasks you may want to consider a Chromebook. The price point can’t be beat, security issues are (largely) nonexistant, and your data is synced across all devices (as well as backed up instantly). If things go south, you can powerwash it with barely a second thought and restore it the way it was before.
Caveats are that printer support is horrible (but getting better) and things like multimedia editing are out of reach. You’re also trusting your data to Big G, which is a legitimate concern for some.