[May 29] Introducing the new Framework Laptop 13 with Intel Core Ultra Series 1 processors (frame.work)
from along_the_road@beehaw.org to technology@beehaw.org on 17 Jun 09:29
https://beehaw.org/post/14491559

Just sharing in case anybody has been waiting for an update from framework

#technology

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tal@lemmy.today on 17 Jun 10:49 next collapse

Battery: 61Wh

No 100Wh battery. :-/

esaru@beehaw.org on 17 Jun 11:12 next collapse

Well, I guess the Famework’s 9 hours of battery life for office work is enough for most use cases. You need to set battery capacity in relation to power consumption, and Framework laptops have great power management with the AMD processors.

TehPers@beehaw.org on 17 Jun 16:32 collapse

My Framework 16 hasn’t run out of battery… ever? I don’t use it often since I mostly use my desktop, but every time I have for the past couple months or so, the battery has been above 50%.

Without gaming, I could almost certainly last a whole day without charging it. I’m not sure I could really ask for more than.

Not sure how the 13 is on battery, but I’d imagine the battery is a bit smaller due to the size difference.

thejevans@lemmy.ml on 17 Jun 14:26 collapse

Fitting a 100W battery in the 13 inch chassis while keeping everything easily serviceable would be impossible

tal@lemmy.today on 17 Jun 15:43 collapse

Make it thicker.

narc0tic_bird@lemm.ee on 17 Jun 11:38 next collapse

This will be my first Framework, already preordered a few weeks ago.

They finally offer a 120 Hz display, and while it has slightly rounded corners which isn’t ideal, but I’ll take the 120 Hz with VRR and higher resolution over perfect corners. They explained they had to use a panel that was already on the market because they don’t have enough volume that they can afford to order a custom display and with the Framework 13 using a 3:2 aspect ratio options were apparently very limited.

They also offer a keyboard with the Super key having a neutral label (not a Windows logo) now.

The new webcam is apparently quite a lot better, but I don’t care too much about that.

I went for the i5 125H model, I think the difference of almost 400,-€ to the i7 155H isn’t worth it for most use cases, as you only get 2 more P cores (with all other core clusters being identical, I think 4+8+2 vs. 6+8+2) and 8 instead of 7 GPU CUs. I feel the difference will be negligible for my use case as soon as it hits power/thermal limits anyway. This also seems to be the stop-gap generation of CPUs, with both AMD and Intel appearing to make noticeable steps forward in the generation.

There’s also the AMD model which is great and got most upgrades the Ultra model did (new display, webcam and keyboard options), only missing out on a slightly improved cooling system. Between the i7 and R7 I probably would’ve gone for the Ryzen 7, but I feel the i5 is the better choice compared to the Ryzen 5, primarily because the iGPU is stripped quite a bit compared to the R7. Intel is also less restrictive on which expansion slot supports what, with every port supporting full USB 4 including DisplayPort. Not a big deal as there are still enough fully-featured slots on the AMD model, but it’s a bit more convenient to just plug in any card anywhere and it works.

anlumo@feddit.de on 17 Jun 13:27 next collapse

This will be my first Framework

Depending on how you treat it, it might also be your last. So far, Framework has offered upgrades to their existing customers so they don’t have to buy a completely new notebook to upgrade.

narc0tic_bird@lemm.ee on 17 Jun 13:46 collapse

Oh yeah, looking forward to hopefully many years of platform support. They’ll obviously have to switch to different memory modules (as an example) at some point (CAMM should be next), but I hope they keep the board compatible with the case, modules, I/O and display for as long as anyhow possible.

I’m coming from a ThinkPad T490 and if that would’ve been a Framework which I could just upgrade from the i7 8565u to a Core Ultra or Ryzen 7000, I wouldn’t need/want a new notebook and could simply upgrade.

esaru@beehaw.org on 17 Jun 17:44 collapse

120 hz dynamically allocated, which means when you read text or do office work you save energy on a lower frame rate, and when you need higher frame rates for scrolling, movie or gaming it automatically increases it up to 120 hz. 120 hz on a 4 k display is something you can’t get from other brands. I have to uprade from my Lenovo X1 Carbon and have to buy a complete new Laptop just to get more RAM, but would have to downgrade the display as Lenovo doesn’t offer good display options in their Laptops anymore. I’m not going to sacrifice my eye sight to save Lenovo production costs. Fortunately, there is Framework now with their user orientated approach. And in the future, I won’t have to throw away a perfectly working high quality display and keyboard just to upgrade RAM, CPU, or ports, as all components can be swapped and independently upgraded on a Framework.

narc0tic_bird@lemm.ee on 17 Jun 18:29 collapse

Lenovo has been weird for many years now with their built-to-order configuration options. They often announce 4 to 5 display options when in reality maybe 2 or 3 are available, and some of them only in combination with some weird other configuration options. Then it also depends on country of order.

onlinepersona@programming.dev on 17 Jun 14:45 next collapse

Why are linux folk so crazy about Framework Laptops? I can understand windows users being crazy about it, but linux users? Aren’t they still second class citizens to frame.work?

Anti Commercial-AI license

Blisterexe@lemmy.zip on 17 Jun 14:55 next collapse

Hardware support is perfect on linux and they allow you to buy it without paying for a windows liscence

onlinepersona@programming.dev on 17 Jun 15:26 collapse

Ah, my information is outdated. Back when they started it was only possible to get windows on it. They seem to have completely embraced linux, which is nice.

Anti Commercial-AI license

niucllos@lemm.ee on 17 Jun 15:24 next collapse

In addition to what Blisterex said, the open-source hardware ethos is very similar to the Linux open-source software ethos, so it attracts a similar crowd

skilltheamps@feddit.de on 17 Jun 15:33 collapse

"almost all of the most technical employees in framework are using either ubuntu, fedora or nixos. I’m mostly on Windows because we need actually people that are using Windows because our employee base in framework is all Linux users"

  • Nirav Patel

m.youtube.com/watch?v=EIEc43CxIvY

jlow@beehaw.org on 17 Jun 20:11 collapse

Any news on Bios updates for Linux though?

xnx@slrpnk.net on 17 Jun 16:58 collapse

When they release an ARM laptop i will get one