Earlier this morning, the Windows Central team in Berlin gave us a hands-on look at Lenovo's new MIIX 700. The two-in-one is certainly very reminiscent of the Surface Pro 3 and that has some people accusing the company of ripping off Microsoft. However, I see this very differently for a few reasons. In fact, I think that the MIIX 700 is welcomed competition and can only help the Surface and the future of PC computing.

The Surface form factor Looking at the MIIX 700 it is hard not to see the resemblance to the Surface Pro 3. Whether it is the metal body, the kickstand, even the magnetic keyboard. Here are a few reasons though why this is just fine. 1. Validation The Surface Pro 3 is by all accounts the sweet spot Microsoft was attempting to achieve. It is the first Surface to really resonate with the public. Surface Pro 4 is going to build off of this momentum. Think refinements not a revolution for the next Surface including an additional, larger 14-inch version (yes, this is true). Best VPN providers 2020: Learn about ExpressVPN, NordVPN & more By Lenovo using the same form factor it reinforces this new market of ultra-portable two-in-ones over traditional laptops. The company obviously sees Microsoft doing something right with the Surface, and they want in on that action too. Conversely, if the Surface were tanking, Lenovo would just pass. 2. Competition Competition in technology is very important. Although capitalism has an odd contradiction (it thrives on rivalry, yet every firm strives to be a monopoly), it is the ability to one-up the other guy that keeps consumers happy. Indeed, the original Surface was born out of the idea of "priming the pump" and Microsoft stepping up where their partners were failing.

One thing, however. Nearly every time we post an article on the Surface or rumors of a new version many armchair engineers here are quick to add their two cents in comments on what Microsoft should do next. Interestingly, there are real engineers (and companies to back them) that also have ideas. Take a look at the MIIX 700 and a few things it does right when compared to the Surface Pro 3: Included keyboard

Comparative and competitively priced

Bluetooth built into the keyboard

Two USB ports (one USB 3.0, the other 2.0)

Optional LTE modem Those are not trivial things. They are substantial and impressive additions that any Surface Pro 3 owner would love to have too. Who knows, maybe the Surface Pro 4 will bring those as well. Or maybe not. The point is if Lenovo can one-up Microsoft (or at least add variation to the market) that is a good thing for consumers. 3. The more, the merrier The last time I checked, the Surface Pro 3 is still not available everywhere worldwide. Part of that is Microsoft's new cautious approach to selling their hardware while other aspects reflect their supply chain limitations (Newsflash: they are not PC manufacturers). Why not let some of their OEM partners shoulder the burden of production risks in other countries? Or leverage better their manufacturing abilities?