If you've been waiting to touch a Surface Pro tablet in 
the living, breathing, once-molten-magnesium flesh, you can finally mark
 a hard date on your calendar: The Windows 8 Pro version of Microsoft's 
tablet will go on sale Feb. 9 at Microsoft stores, 
microsoftstore.com, Staples and Best Buy in the U.S.
The 64GB version will retail for $900, while the 128GB model will 
cost a cool $1,000. Both models will come with Microsoft's new Surface 
pen writing stylus (which I used during a brief 
hands-on at CES),
 but neither model comes pre-loaded with any version of Office, which 
has been a nice bundled addition for Microsoft's struggling Surface RT 
model.
While Surface RT is loaded with Windows RT, the 
hobbled OS incapable of running desktop apps,
 the upcoming Surface for big boys and girls runs the full version of 
Windows 8 Pro, and is a complete, 64-bit PC by definition. This is 
self-evident during a quick scan of its Ultrabook-caliber hardware 
specs.
Yep, that's the new Surface Pro, with its Surface pen at the ready.
Surface vs Surface
Where Surface RT has an Nvidia Tegra 3 ARM chip and 2GB of RAM, the 
Surface Pro packs a Core i5 and 4GB of RAM. And where the RT's 10.6-inch
 display has a 1366-by-768 resolution, the Pro keeps the same screen 
dimensions but increases the pixel grid to true HD at 1920-by-1080.
USB, you ask? The RT tablet is limited to USB 2.0, whereas the Pro 
gives you USB 3.0 support. And of course the Pro version comes with the 
Surface pen for writing in digital ink, and also boasts a Mini 
DisplayPort for driving behemoth desktop monitors.
All of this is packed in a sleek, silky VaporMg chassis that's only 
slightly larger and heavier than what you'll find in a Surface RT. The 
RT clocks in at 0.37-inch thick and 1.5 pounds, while the Pro is 
0.53-inch thick and 2 pounds. Unfortunately, while the Pro version has a
 beefier battery than its RT sibling (42 w-h to the RT's 31.5 w-h), 
customers should 
expect much poorer battery life.
 Behold, the Surface pen. It lets you jot notes directly on the tablet's capacitive touch screen.
So, yeah, that ARM processor in the Surface RT is good for something.
Sorry, Surface RT fans, but I stand by my position that Surface 
Windows 8 Pro is the full realization of the Surface concept. Sure, 
Surface RT offers a fine tablet experience, but given the lack of 
compelling Windows Store apps, I need a full 
desktop 
experience--if only to get my job done while working on the road. And in
 the Surface family, a fully functioning desktop is only available in 
the device that debuts Feb. 9.
The Surface family expands
The launch of Surface Pro is the big news, but on Feb. 9 eager 
Surface fans will also be able to buy a couple of new accessories, plus a
 new Surface RT option.
Three new Touch Cover designs also go on sale Feb. 9.
First up, Microsoft is releasing some "limited edition" Touch Cover 
options sporting three laser-etched designs.There's a new cyan cover 
with a vaguely skater-ish skull motif, a magenta cover with a floral 
print, and a red cover that pays homage to Chinese New Year with a "Year
 of the Snake" design.
I saw two of the new covers at CES, and they looked, well, pleasant. If I were in the market for a Touch Cover, I 
might
 buy one of the limited edition models if they didn't cost $130, which 
is $10 more than unadorned Touch Covers. Then again, I don't put play 
with stickers any more, so maybe I'm not the target market.

Slightly
 more interesting is the Surface version of Microsoft's Wedge Touch 
Mouse, which costs $70 and is clad in a color-matched veneer to look 
right at home beside the VaporMG chassis of your Surface Tablet. The 
original version of the Wedge Mouse
 also costs $70, and is expressly designed for Windows 8, offering 
four-way touch scrolling, Bluetooth connectivity, and BlueTrack 
technology, which allows it to perform well on pretty much any surface 
save clear glass and mirrors.
Finally, on Feb. 9, Microsoft will also begin selling a new version 
of Surface RT. To date, if you wanted the 64GB of Surface RT, you could 
only get it bundled with a black Touch Cover for a total price of $700. 
Well, now that 64GB version can be purchased solo for $600, and no 
keyboard cover whatsoever will be foisted on you, against your will or 
better judgement. This, of course, frees up some cash so you can buy a 
Type Cover (the cover option with actual moving keys), or perhaps one of
 the more fancy "limited edition" Touch Covers that's about to go on 
sale.
Microsoft tells us we should be getting our Surface Pro hardware in 
the next couple of weeks, so please stay tuned for my final review.