Thread with 9 posts
jump to expanded postdo any of my followers own a framework laptop
do you like it
βͺi can't bring myself to buy a new laptop with non-upgradeable storage and philosophically i like the idea of the framework but coming from an apple laptop i am surely going to be very disappointed in the build quality. maybe i should just get a thinkpad or somethingβ¬
@hikari I've never replaced a laptop due to storage space exhaustion, it's always been for a perf improvement (which is never upgradeable in laptops anyway) or because the old one is suffering some sort of failure
@rcombs you live your life differently to me, it seems
but also i must point out that framework's whole point is you can improve perf without replacing the entire thing
@hikari huh, I didn't realize the mainboard was upgradable; remains to be seen how well that goes over time, though; I'll be impressed if a single layout ends up longer-lived than eg a CPU socket tends to be (i.e. just short enough for upgrades to rarely be worthwhile)
@hikari particularly given the timing with the windows PC market currently quite possibly at the cusp of its ARM moment; if they've managed to design a laptop chassis that can accommodate an end-user-performed upgrade across CPU architectures, I will be *incredibly* impressed
@rcombs they already launched both intel and amd versions of their product though i don't know off the top of my head if you can actually switch between them
@hikari @rcombs afaik, you can buy just an AMD mainboard (https://frame.work/products/mainboard-kit-amd-ryzen-7040-series) and then follow the guide they have published (https://guides.frame.work/Guide/AMD+Ryzen+7040+Series+Upgrade+Overview/205) to swap it in (including from an Intel board)