No, I don't think you're doing it wrong. I think the microsoft surfacebook design, where it could be used like a normal laptop with the keyboard attached, or like a tablet with the screen detached was the only design that could really do both well, and it had its own issues.
The regular surface devices (and ipads and android tablets) that are tablet-devices first with flimsy detachable keyboards are fine if you have a table to set them on, but difficult to use on your lap, and often have a mediocre typing experience.
And, on the flip side, you get devices like this where the keyboard stays attached and folds around behind the screen. It can be good for certain use cases, but it's clearly meant to be a laptop first, and it's "tablet mode" is inevitably going to be more cumbersome than a "real" tablet.
The regular surface devices (and ipads and android tablets) that are tablet-devices first with flimsy detachable keyboards are fine if you have a table to set them on, but difficult to use on your lap, and often have a mediocre typing experience.
And, on the flip side, you get devices like this where the keyboard stays attached and folds around behind the screen. It can be good for certain use cases, but it's clearly meant to be a laptop first, and it's "tablet mode" is inevitably going to be more cumbersome than a "real" tablet.
I doubt there's any perfect solution, TBH.