In this case, commercial doesn’t actually mean what you may think it does, referring to a business-friendly model that will largely be unavailable to “regular” users. Those everyday consumers will need to wait a bit longer for a more radically upgraded Surface Pro 10 edition with a new high-quality OLED display in tow, as well as an ultra-wide-angle front-facing camera and a built-in NFC reader.
All in all, there’s clearly still a lot of confusion hovering over Microsoft’s tablet release plans this year, so instead of going further down the gossip rabbit hole, the wise thing is probably just to give the company two more weeks to announce… something.
That something will almost certainly include a Surface Laptop 6 with ARM and Intel versions of its own as well, which sounds equally intriguing even if you’re not much of a traditional laptop person.