The Devil Wears Prada<\/em> when a fashion editor tells her intern that the choice to wear a particular (cerulean blue) sweater wasn\u2019t the intern\u2019s choice at all, but an unconscious response to the work of a handful of individuals who tell the rest of us what to wear.<\/p>\nThere are entire industries dedicated to finding the next cool thing. Cool-hunters. Cultural anthropologists who embed themselves in burgeoning hipster communities (physical and online) in order to analyse and dissect the language of cool. They\u2019re then able to overlay that language onto products and services \u2013 often targeting insecure teens and twenty-somethings. Often their impact is imperceptible. At other times, it can backfire quite badly. Like with the story of a famous scooter manufacturer\u00a0that hired cool models to ride around Miami\u2019s South Beach (hard to get cooler than South Beach) on their scooters being flirty. When they were approached for their phone numbers, though, the models provided would-be suitors the number of the scooter\u2019s local dealerships. Not cool.<\/p>\n
And this contrived idea of cool wasn\u2019t remotely close to the feeling in the room when we first got our hands on a Surface Book.<\/p>\n
In search of a different kind of cool<\/h2>\n
To get to the heart of the matter, I tried to go beyond the features of the Surface Book and beyond cool-hunting. I turned instead to the broader Surface community to get their take on what makes Surface cool. Not surprisingly, their thoughts were as diverse as they were \u2013 Surface users are artists and architects. Teachers and techies. But looking closer at some of their stories, particularly those of mobile professionals, there were some common threads. First many of them were pragmatic dreamers: while there was a common thread of creativity, there was also a drive to turn that imagination into action. Second, they were multi-dimensional \u2013 chasing multiple passions with equal enthusiasm: doctors who surf. Data analysts who DJ. They\u2019re social entrepreneurs who are doing well by doing good.<\/p>\n
They also thought the question of cool was a bit silly. The overall sentiment went something like this: \u201cI didn\u2019t buy a Surface because it was cool. I bought it because it meets my very demanding needs and very busy life. The fact that it\u2019s cool is irrelevant\u2026well, mostly irrelevant.\u201d<\/p>\n
For Surface users, cool wasn\u2019t about how you looked. It\u2019s about what you do. Not some adolescent outward show, but that inner voice that\u2019s come into its own, driving you to achieve more. In short, it was cool grown up. So what does cool look like to a Surface user?<\/p>\n
For them cool isn\u2019t about having the shiniest toys, it\u2019s about a busy sales executive having the right tools at their fingertips to crush their quarterly sales quota, get their bonus and take their fianc\u00e9 on an unforgettable holiday in the Maldives. It\u2019s the architect who gets to watch some random stranger stop and stare, transfixed, at an arched doorway he designed. It\u2019s the knowledge that when two roads diverge in a yellow wood, with the right tools, you can take both. And that\u2019s pretty cool.<\/p>\n
So back to the original question: is Surface Book cool?<\/p>\n