NFC will not work through a metal chassis and one of the design ethos from the Surface Team is no plastic on the device (with the exception of the LTE version of the Surface 2).
I seem to recall one of the other reviews mentioning pci-e on the power port was a proprietary implementation so if your thinking of leveraging the power port its not std pci-e.No one an answered the op on this. I know it's a bit old but this is important to me as well.
connections were to display port, USB port, and of course power. The power port in previous models was just power, nothing else.What port did the original docking station leverage?
So, what does that mean? What sort of devices coudl you attach that are PCI-e? I know you get the slots in the computer for things like graphics cards etc, but I'm not sure what applications are available for a port like the power port?after reviewing the features of the dock it sounds like it definitely passes pci-e....
So, what does that mean? What sort of devices coudl you attach that are PCI-e? I know you get the slots in the computer for things like graphics cards etc, but I'm not sure what applications are available for a port like the power port?
Just curious, one dock or two?It means that the Microsoft docking station is a true docking station versus a glorified port replicator. The power port most likely has a much higher throughput that a USB 3 port. So the performance of devices pulled into the docking station should be quite good. Of course none of this can be confirmed until they start shipping.
The docking station was one of the deciding factors for me to buy a Surface. I use my SP3 as my work machine and my home machine.