The soft-touch plastic keyboard feels comfortable and solid enough to rest my hands on providing I’m using the Galaxy Book’s laptop mode on a desk rather than my lap where things get a little wobbly.
Of course, you have to pay an extra £125 or so for the TypeCover while the Galaxy Book’s cover doesn’t come with an additional premium. But the savings here sadly mean it feels inferior to Redmond’s efforts; it’s by no means a bad keyboard just not reaching the highest hybrid echelons or replicating the feel of typing on a good ultraportable.
My biggest issue with the keyboard cover was its design. The tablet connects to the keyboard neatly using magnetic pins and a neat grove, but to prop it up in laptop mode a magnetic flap needs to be positioned on the tablet’s rear to set it at the desired angle.
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Complete review well done, as the 10.6 is not reviewed often. I don't think the comparison to the surface pro is accurate because of the different screen size. More apt comparison would be surface 3 non pro or any hybrid under 11 inches.