@@FloorNap its really not worth it for the money, hardware is solid "for the most part" but not worth the money at all, the smart charge connectors are usually junk as well, come out to easily and break at the base of the plug with heavy but careful use, then you'd have to use USB c port to charge it like I am on mine because the connector itself is deeply flawed, on my surface go 2 I only have one USB c port which is for data only and I wasn't about to use a dongle which will do pd with data transfer which would hang off the side of my tablet like a tumor. Like I said in my comment which unfortunately seems to been edited or deleted as well as techtacles reply "for some reason, probably Microsoft hating the truth being spoken" I would recommend this, instead, look into us starlabs systems and their 12.4" starlite tablet, fully serviceable for the user. Warranty covers you taking it apart yourself, it is actively cooled, not passively like the go line. Get it with 16gb ram and a 1tb nvme drive. Worth your money, it is a better product. Though I would recommend putting your own nvme drive inside with a low profile heatsink like this Easycargo Laptop M.2 Heatsink Kit, Slim Copper Heat Sink + Thermal pad 1mm 0.5mm for Cooling Laptop PS5 M2 2280 SSD NVMe (1-Pack) and also using ARCTIC TP-3: Premium Performance Thermal Pad, 120 x 20 x 1.0 mm on the nvme drive for the heatsink because the stock pads that come with heatsinks usually suck, usually they are far to hard to form around the nand chips and controller to provide good thermal conductivity. This is the drive I recommend WD_BLACK 1TB SN850X NVMe Internal Gaming SSD Solid State Drive - Gen4 PCIe, M.2 2280, Up to 7,300 MB/s - WDS100T2X0E instead of the stock one, it measures the best out of every nvme gen4 drive on the market, it would be a huge upgrade over the stock one that comes with it, though even the stock nvme drive would still blow away anything that comes in the surface go lines as they usually use slower eemc storage. In my opinion any computer running windows 11 should never have 8gb ram, that's the bare minimum these days. Buy all the upgrades from Amazon by copy and pasting, though if you don't want to do that at least add the heatsink to the stock nvme drive for better cooling. When you visit the artic tp-3 thermal pads page on Amazon look for a review by bobfrost, he'll go into more detail about these thermal pads.
Lmao, there is more to computers than gaming dumbass. Audio engineering, photo editing, video editing, cad work.@@suarez_894 besides windows 11 literally eats 30 percent or more of 8 gigs just chillin, then chrome or Firefox sucks up a few gigs too. By the time you're done you hardly have overhead which makes windows more likely to start swapping which will put unnecessary stress on your ssd which have limited amount of read write cycle, especially these days with the death of 2 bit mlc memory. Every manufacturer uses tlc or qlc. Combine that in this case where you cannot replace it unless you have a proper smd hot plate and smd reballer kit with the proper type of solder with the proper metal composition and proper hot air gun to replace it. Unless you're careful and actually know what you're doing to extend the life of such an ignorant design choices you'll have a hard time. 16 gigs should be minimum. If you really want to use your computer for a long time and also future proof it, get 32 gigs and call it a day. Get an actually good ssd like I said above or a Samsung 980, 990 pro, crucial t700, sabrent rocket 4 plus ssd, grab at least a 1 or 2tb drive then provision 25 percent of its capacity and turn write caching on and add a nice heatsink and disable search indexing and if you can get away with it, get rid of you hyberfill.sys file to get rid of hibernation entirely, but just make sure to not lose power after doing that. Slightly more risk for data loss during a power outage, but if you aren't stupid, you could literally get 5x the life outta your ssd. Get more than enough ram to never need a damn paging file. There are right ways to do shit and wrong ways.
No stories and blaablablaa direct to the facts. Awesome
still only 8 gb ram? No thanks, got a go 2 and never again
Is it bad ? The go 2?
@@FloorNap its really not worth it for the money, hardware is solid "for the most part" but not worth the money at all, the smart charge connectors are usually junk as well, come out to easily and break at the base of the plug with heavy but careful use, then you'd have to use USB c port to charge it like I am on mine because the connector itself is deeply flawed, on my surface go 2 I only have one USB c port which is for data only and I wasn't about to use a dongle which will do pd with data transfer which would hang off the side of my tablet like a tumor. Like I said in my comment which unfortunately seems to been edited or deleted as well as techtacles reply "for some reason, probably Microsoft hating the truth being spoken" I would recommend this, instead, look into us starlabs systems and their 12.4" starlite tablet, fully serviceable for the user. Warranty covers you taking it apart yourself, it is actively cooled, not passively like the go line. Get it with 16gb ram and a 1tb nvme drive. Worth your money, it is a better product. Though I would recommend putting your own nvme drive inside with a low profile heatsink like this Easycargo Laptop M.2 Heatsink Kit, Slim Copper Heat Sink + Thermal pad 1mm 0.5mm for Cooling Laptop PS5 M2 2280 SSD NVMe (1-Pack) and also using ARCTIC TP-3: Premium Performance Thermal Pad, 120 x 20 x 1.0 mm on the nvme drive for the heatsink because the stock pads that come with heatsinks usually suck, usually they are far to hard to form around the nand chips and controller to provide good thermal conductivity. This is the drive I recommend WD_BLACK 1TB SN850X NVMe Internal Gaming SSD Solid State Drive - Gen4 PCIe, M.2 2280, Up to 7,300 MB/s - WDS100T2X0E instead of the stock one, it measures the best out of every nvme gen4 drive on the market, it would be a huge upgrade over the stock one that comes with it, though even the stock nvme drive would still blow away anything that comes in the surface go lines as they usually use slower eemc storage. In my opinion any computer running windows 11 should never have 8gb ram, that's the bare minimum these days. Buy all the upgrades from Amazon by copy and pasting, though if you don't want to do that at least add the heatsink to the stock nvme drive for better cooling. When you visit the artic tp-3 thermal pads page on Amazon look for a review by bobfrost, he'll go into more detail about these thermal pads.
For what you Need more than 8? Gaming hahah
Lmao, there is more to computers than gaming dumbass. Audio engineering, photo editing, video editing, cad work.@@suarez_894 besides windows 11 literally eats 30 percent or more of 8 gigs just chillin, then chrome or Firefox sucks up a few gigs too. By the time you're done you hardly have overhead which makes windows more likely to start swapping which will put unnecessary stress on your ssd which have limited amount of read write cycle, especially these days with the death of 2 bit mlc memory. Every manufacturer uses tlc or qlc. Combine that in this case where you cannot replace it unless you have a proper smd hot plate and smd reballer kit with the proper type of solder with the proper metal composition and proper hot air gun to replace it. Unless you're careful and actually know what you're doing to extend the life of such an ignorant design choices you'll have a hard time. 16 gigs should be minimum. If you really want to use your computer for a long time and also future proof it, get 32 gigs and call it a day. Get an actually good ssd like I said above or a Samsung 980, 990 pro, crucial t700, sabrent rocket 4 plus ssd, grab at least a 1 or 2tb drive then provision 25 percent of its capacity and turn write caching on and add a nice heatsink and disable search indexing and if you can get away with it, get rid of you hyberfill.sys file to get rid of hibernation entirely, but just make sure to not lose power after doing that. Slightly more risk for data loss during a power outage, but if you aren't stupid, you could literally get 5x the life outta your ssd. Get more than enough ram to never need a damn paging file. There are right ways to do shit and wrong ways.
@@suarez_894opening more than 3 chrome tabs
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