Tag Archives: laptop

Dell G15 5515 hits 3DMark with an AMD Ryzen 7 5800H processor, an NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 GPU and 16 GB of RAM

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HP Omen 15 with Zen 3 Ryzen 5 CPU and GeForce RTX 3060 graphics is back on sale for an even cheaper $1120 USD

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Apple M1 silicon upsets the establishment by skipping past the AMD Ryzen 7 5800X and coming close to Intel Core i7-11700K single-thread performance on PassMark

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How to run a battery life report on your Windows laptop

When my editor told me about Window’s built-in battery report, my first thought was: “How have I never heard of this before? Also, that sounds pretty useful!” So I looked at the guide he sent (from Laptop Magazine) and tried it out. It ended up being just as interesting as it sounded, so I figured I’d share, in case you also haven’t come across this handy built-in tool.

Windows has been keeping track of how your laptop’s battery is doing since it was installed. The report, which you can run using just two command prompt commands, will show how many cycles you’ve used on your battery and how it’s been used in the past three days. It will also give you a picture of what Windows estimates your battery life should be versus what it actually is.

So if you’re curious about your battery status or you’ve been noticing that your battery life has been a bit of a drag lately and are wondering if it’s due to neglect or some power virus on your computer sucking back a bunch of juice, this report should let you know.

  • First, open the Command Prompt tool. To do that, you can search “CMD” from the Start menu, and click on Command Prompt to open it.
  • The report will be spit out as an HTML file, so we’ll want to make sure it’s easy to find. To do that, type in:

cd %HOMEPATH%/Desktop

  • This command simply navigates your current directory to your desktop, so when you generate the report, you can find it there.
  • To generate the report, type:

powercfg /batteryreport

  • This runs the powerconfig tool and tells it to spit out a battery report, which should now be sitting on your desktop as an HTML file.
  • Double-click the file to open it up in your browser (or it might ask you which program you want to open the file in, which would be your browser). Now you can see all of that sweet, sweet battery information.

The battery usage graph can tell you how fast your battery drains over time.

This could help you get an idea of how you use your battery or show your recent computer habits.

Seeing the design capacity estimate versus your actual time could tell you whether it’s time to replace your battery.

One caveat: my laptop is used, and as a policy, I completely nuke whatever Windows install is on any laptop I buy, overwriting it with a new one. If you’ve just bought a used laptop and want to know what state the battery is in, you’ll probably want to run this tool before wiping Windows, as it seems the cycle count only reflects what’s happened on the current Windows install. My laptop is a 2018 model, and I’m pretty sure it’s gone through more than 177 cycles since then.

Even if you’re on a newer install, you can get a general sense of the health by looking at the design capacity and then the full charge capacity to see how different they are.

If you’re an Apple user who’s feeling left out, don’t worry: macOS lets you access some battery information, too, though there isn’t as much historical data. To see it, go to the Apple menu in the top left, and click “About This Mac.” Then click the System Report button, and under Hardware, go to Power. There, you can see the cycle count of your battery, its estimated health, and all of your current power settings. To see your battery usage graphs over the past 24 hours or 10 days, go to System Preferences and then Battery.

Apple has fewer graphs built in, but you can see usage statistics in System Preferences > Battery.

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The NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 Ti is a shadow of its former self after 18 months of crypto mining

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Startup designs a modular, repairable laptop

As devices become less and less repairable, it’s always heartening when companies build devices with an eye on sustainability. After all, repairing the machine you already own will almost always be more friendly to the environment than buying a new one. Framework is a hardware startup, founded by former Oculus engineer Nirav Patel, that is looking to take the Fairphone model and bring it to laptops, even shipping with a screwdriver in the box.

Today, the company is announcing its first product, the Framework laptop, a 13.5-inch notebook with a number of modular parts. The idea is that users can swap out several of the components when they break, or upgrade them when technology moves on. Now, repairable laptops aren’t a new invention, but the focus here looks to be making this as friendly for novices as it possibly can be.

The Framework laptop is packing a 13.5-inch, 2,256 x 1,504 3:2 display which is hidden behind a series of magnetic bezels, making it easy to replace. It is also packing a 1080p, 60fps webcam with a hardware privacy switch and a keyboard with 1.5mm key travel. As for the chip, you’ll get the option of selecting a quad-core 11th-generation Intel Core CPU alongside with WiFi 6, up to 64GB of DDR4 and up to 4TB of Gen4 NVME SSD storage.

Almost all of the machine’s components, including the display, battery, keyboard and the display bezels are replaceable. Inside, you’ll also find that the SSDs, memory and WiFi modules all use industry-standard sockets; the only thing that isn’t is the CPU, in fact. If you want to upgrade that, you’ll need to pull out and return the mainboard, newer versions of which will be available from Framework’s store when new chip options arrive.

Patel said that each module “uses a single labelled connector,” and most of them have “pull tabs to make them easy to handle.” He added that, of the components that can be replaced, the only problematic one is the mainboard itself, since you’d need to disconnect everything that it connects to before removal. But, he added, ripping out the machine’s heart would be a pretty rare event.

Naturally, whenever people discuss repairability, there’s always the idea that this is an eat-your-vegetables situation, with low-end specs and clunky performance. Patel says that this isn’t the situation here, saying that he wants to meet, or beat, the ThinkPad T, Surface Laptop and XPS 13 on performance.

Framework

One of the more interesting elements of Framework’s conception is how the company handles the ports running down both sides of the machine. Rather than fixing the port selection and running the risk of obsolescence, the company has built what it’s calling “expansion cards.” These are little boxes with the option of adding a USB-C, USB-A, HDMI, DisplayPort, MicroSD, an extra SSD or a discrete headphone amp to the chassis. In order to make these expansion cards universal, the company has built USB-C ports directly onto the laptop’s mainboard. Making them, broadly speaking, more like dongles than actual hardware ports.

Beyond the pledge to make the laptop easy to upgrade and repair, Framework is also burning its other environmental credentials. It says that the machine is made of up to 50 percent post-consumer recycled aluminum and up to 30 percent post-consumer recycled plastic. Oh, and the packaging is recyclable, with no single-use plastics, and all of the shipments are carbon offset.

The Framework laptop will begin shipping at some point this summer for an as-yet unspecified price, although Patel said buyers wouldn’t be paying “a premium for longevity.” Instead, the hardware will be “on par with other well-reviewed notebooks with similar silicon.” Users can opt for a number of pre-configured models running either Windows 10 Home or Pro, while a DIY edition will ship to you disassembled.

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The carbon-fiber Vaio Z is the world’s lightest laptop with an Intel H-series chip

Vaio is known for making laptops that pack a surprising amount of power into unbelievably thin form factors. The Vaio Z may be the company’s most ambitious product yet. It contains up to Intel’s four-core Core i7-11357H — and at a starting weight of 2.11 pounds, it’ll be the lightest laptop ever to house an Intel H-series processor. (Though models you can buy in the US are 2.32 pounds.)

Part of the reason the Vaio Z is so light is that it’s the first laptop ever to be made of “contoured carbon fiber.” You’ll find carbon fiber in some of the nicest lightweight laptops on the market, including the Dell XPS line — it’s a sturdy and lightweight material. But those laptops utilize sheets of carbon fiber that are held together with metal or plastic parts. Vaio has actually contoured the material around the edges of the Z’s chassis, so it’s carbon fiber all around.

Vaio says the device has passed 26 “surface drop” tests, and will deliver up to 13 and a half hours of battery life. In terms of other specs, you can get up to 2TB of storage, 32GB of memory, Iris Xe integrated graphics, and either an FHD or a 4K 14-inch display. There’s a backlit keyboard, a webcam with a physical shutter, a full-size HDMI port, and two USB-C ports as well. The chassis is a clamshell, though you can fold the screen down to 180 degrees.

Of course, this all doesn’t come cheap. The Vaio Z starts at — I’m not joking — $3,579. So it won’t be a practical purchase for most people, but it’s still an impressive achievement and an interesting proof-of-concept. Keep an eye out for our full review in a few days, where we’ll dive into the performance you can expect for that price. You can preorder units now on Vaio’s website.

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VAIO Z is a pricey laptop with a ‘3D molded’ carbon fiber body

Fans of VAIO laptops may recall the flagship Z series being known for its impressive portability, until it quietly disappeared in 2017. The good news is that the Sony spinoff is now bringing this line out of retirement, thanks to a breakthrough in carbon fiber production. The new VAIO Z is allegedly the world’s first laptop to sport a “3D molded full carbon fiber body,” as in each carbon fiber piece is contoured around all sides on the lid, the palm rest and the base assembly. Previously, VAIO could only use flat carbon fiber sheets, so it had to rely on metallic or plastic parts to hold those together.

VAIO

Using this new production technique co-developed with carbon fiber specialist, Toray, the result is a stronger structure — one that can apparently survive a 127cm or 4.1ft drop (a little beyond the MIL-STD-810H requirement) — while keeping the laptop’s weight to a little under 2.3lbs or 1.04kg. Not bad, considering the VAIO Z packs a 14-inch 4K anti-glare LCD, along with a backlit keyboard featuring an improved 1.5mm key pitch stroke.

But in terms of sockets, you only get one USB-C Thunderbolt 4 port on each side, a full-size HDMI port, a headphone jack and a security lock slot. A far cry from VAIO’s earlier SX series.

To ease your mind, VAIO has added a physical privacy shutter to the 2-megapixel webcam, though you’ll want to keep it open for Windows Hello instant sign-in, of course. On a related note, the VAIO Z provides a keyboard shortcut (Fn + Tab keys) for muting both stereo microphones at an instant.

VAIO

Battery life is another main selling point here. The company claims that the VAIO Z can last for up to 10 hours (the Japanese spec sheet even lists 17 hours, based on local test standards), yet it’s powered by an Intel Core i7-11375H high-performance processor complete with Iris Xe graphics. This is a much welcomed change compared to the low-voltage CPUs on older models.

VAIO

Interestingly, the US market is only getting the Signature Edition VAIO Z, which starts from $3,579 (16GB LPDDR4 RAM and 512GB “4th Generation” PCIe SSD) and maxes out at $4,179 (32GB RAM and 2TB SSD). Despite VAIO’s attempt to pitch the Z up against Apple’s M1 MacBook Pro in its keynote, it’s clear that this laptop isn’t for everyone. But by all means, if you happen to be looking for an excuse to splash out while stuck at home, VAIO is now taking pre-orders. Otherwise, there are obviously plenty other more affordable options.

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GeForce laptop makers who don’t explicitly state their target TGP levels would be withholding vital performance information from potential customers and we’re going to start calling them out for it

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Razer pre-orders for Blade 15 GeForce RTX 3060 to 3080 now open starting at $1699 USD

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