I would throw in my vote for the Surface Pro 2 (well worth the cost).
Having enough storage for most to any applications and apps, and personal files (with abilities being able to work with USB drive sticks and micro SD cards) the biggest benefit would be being able to not feel like a terminal to the internet, but rather a separate individual computer, being able to work as well off line (cloud processing and streaming be damned) and just as well on the go, and in your hands and having a full PC in your hands or lap or everywhere using a proven software base.
It is a device that I would have liked years ago back in college (and most definitely high school). It is sized right for me in full physical keyboard interactions with the type cover while at the same time, being able to fold back for a tablet.
The double edge sword, is that it uses two active cooling (fans) that add thickness, which adds the ability to being able to dissipate heat under full processing load when needed for performance. I rather have this than having the device overheat (my hands or burning out the device). Since using the Surface Pro 2 unplugged mostly, I have not an issue where the device does go warm. Only those fans would come on in full if I play a 3D game. Even CAD manipulation (pen and touch manipulation) does not stress the device to the fullest.
It is a good balance in consolidation, portability, leisure, work (right away without waiting for app development, app validation, and app testing), and typing comfort along with the biggest draw of the pen in feeling and looking like a natural pen when used (drawing, writing) with smoothness in strokes and performance. I demoed a Note about several months ago, and the entry in the handwriting areas are not as nice, smoothness of strokes being the thing that stands out.
Say what you want about the Tablet PC, but Microsoft has done well to improve the inking aspects over time (beginning with XP Tablet Edition).