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| I'd say that after numerous revelations in regards to UEFI vulnerabilities and such, an open source BIOS / EFI has become a necessity for me rather than something just nice to have. |
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| And a 2-in-1 laptop in tent mode would be perfect for (casual) gaming on the train with a gamepad; much more ergonomic than holding one of the many heavy gaming handhelds. |
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| Well, different people are fascinated by different things. :) I hope both products are successful, they've been (so far) a force for good in the industry as far as I can tell. |
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| For me as well, this sounds much more exciting.
A laptop tablet hybrid that I can actually repair would be great. Would use tablet mode for image editing and hand-written notes. |
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| I had a coat with large side pockets just big enough to fit the 11" air. Not that I would ever use them for that, but it sure felt nice to have the option... |
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| Thanks a lot for that link! I know nothing of Apple stuff and a friend has got an old iMac that he thought was unupdatable but it seems there's a way. Cheers! |
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| Same here. The 12" Macbook Retina was just about the perfect laptop size and weight, just had not enough HP, and obviously not serviceable in the same way as Framework.
The 12" form factor tho.. |
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| Strix Point AMD laptop CPUs are just better than non-Apple ARM CPUs across the board, and don't have the whole host of compatibility issues. There isn't really any point to them. |
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| Linux on arm is actually pretty terrible outside of the server space due to their (Qualcomm, Imagination, and ARM) integrated GPUs being bad and having terrible drivers. |
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| You trade no incidental fan noise and better idle power for ass performance and "too bad this app you used for years doesn't work". I don't think that's even close to a good deal. |
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| Looks like their entire website is behind a waiting room at the moment.
You’d think they could make their most popular pages static for now and serve them out of the CloudFlare cache, though. |
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| The 12-inch laptop might be interesting as a potential upgrade to my remarkable, with the obvious benefit of also being usable as a laptop.
I wonder how writing on the touch screen feels? |
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| Apparently it comes with an optional stylus, so there might indeed be a touchscreen there.
Their website was hugged to death, so I can't confirm. |
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| On sibling thread I already mention the Surface Pro (convertible) at 12'' and it's 2880 x 1920. The next 2025 convertible that I found, Latitude 7350, is also 2880 x 1920 (at 13'', though). In fact, most of the 12'' convertibles with 1080p are either sub$800 (which I doubt this thing is) or come from Lenovo (whom you really do NOT want to compare with regarding screen quality -- https://www.notebookcheck.net/Enough-with-the-cheap-screens-... ).
And let's not get started on 12'' Android tablets... |
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| The last Surface model is less than one month old. The chassis was updated less than 2 years ago ( and to reduce the screen margins, no less ), and the resolution was improved again. |
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| For me it's the perfect resolution on a laptop currently. I don't need a higher resolution and by not unnecessarily increasing it I get better performance, better battery life and a lower cost. |
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| I can see that you have strong feelings about it, but let's be honest, this is perfect resolution for the laptop. And since it is Framework, they might have upgrade in the future. |
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| It's higher DPI than a 24" 4K monitor. It is plenty dense, especially for a battery powered device where the power needed to drive the display is a real consideration. |
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| > Since when has DPI started _decreasing_ again?
Since the pandemic. I have a still functioning Galaxy S8 in my drawer, which shames modern phones with its 570ppi density. |
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| It's a downgrade in DPI compared to even the 16, let alone the 13. Does it at least correspond to a higher refresh rate like with the 16?
Hopefully that's upgradeable someday in any case. |
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| Curious if you're running Linux, I recall seeing a discussion about there being a bug with that on Framework that causes it to not suspend properly and burn energy. |
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| > I would have strongly preferred they spent the time and effort (and money) fixing or replacing these 1st gen mainboards
Sadly this does not generate revenue to the shareholders. |
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| If you kept the sails and rebuilt the boat around them, does it make sense to say it's the same boat?
That's why I said "you can believe your story" while I pointed out it's a very unlikely one. |
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| > This only exists because nobody was putting the Ryzen AI Max+ 395 in anything... And then a desktop because fitting this in a laptop is hard (hence why nobody else is doing it, either)
The Ryzen AI Max+ 395 was paper launched a month ago. What Framework announced here is just another pre-order (even batch 1 won't ship until Q3). There are dozens of other systems, including mini-PCs, announced months ago which are set to launch before this. Small laptops were actually the first 395+ products to launch, hence this month's benchmark reviews all used them. E.g. https://www.tomsguide.com/computing/laptops/gaming-laptops/a... I would not be surprised if one will be able to get a full 128 GB 395+ mini PC for less than the cost of the Framework Desktop baseboard before the Framework Desktop actually starts arriving in hands. What you're buying here is a premium to be able to replace the shell and front USB ports. |
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| Where can I find those mini-PCs? The HP Z2 Mini G1a is "Coming Soon". If this is to be believed:
"2025年5月以降販売開始予定", which translate to "Sales scheduled to start after May 2025"
That is Q2 2025 - at the earliest.
I haven't found any other with a committed release/ship date. This Reddit thread tends to agree: https://www.reddit.com/r/MiniPCs/comments/1ieiate/when_are_r... Even the Asus Z13 laptops with the 395+ have no shipping date yet. Looking at the two GMKtec systems with their rattling fans I have here, I would rather take the Framework system where I can easily swap the fan. Cooling those 100-120W will take space and air flow. |
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| This starts with 32GB of RAM, so no the mac mini isn't the low priced alternative at that point.
Also fully spec'd at 128gb is $2000, which only gets you a 64gb mac mini |
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| Full size sure, but we already have that, so it doesn't matter
In SFF land?, maybe, but that's already a lot closer to laptops, which is where I expect this to loop back into regular Framework lineup |
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| I think it's an offering for companies that would like to get onboard with Framework but would prefer to only have one contract / contact for their laptops and desktops. |
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| I feel like the target audience would build (or buy used/build used) something cheaper that's more powerful.
The form factor isn't small enough to make this worth it IMO |
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| > really important for running things like LLMs
and games, having really speedy/low latency memory helps a lot with being competitive to some mid range dedicated GPUs |
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| Correct me if I am wrong, but I believe this is an AMD SoC, so a combo of a CPU+GPU (and TPU/AI engine, whatever you wanna call it) on the same chip. And they do share the RAM. |
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| > So don't make it then?
You presume to have internalized Framework's core-values more than the founder/CEO? The box is not my cup of tea,but they are free to experiment. |
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| "Details of Framework’s Environmental Ethos and Long Term Mission": https://knowledgebase.frame.work/details-of-framework-s-envi...
> July 7 2022 3:26pm > Framework’s mission is to fix consumer electronics - and we are doing that by respecting you and the planet. We have put this vision into everything we do by providing you with amazing products that are meant to last as long as possible by letting you upgrade and modify them over that lifetime to support your specific needs. > Our mission is to reduce the amount of waste that is generated and energy that is expended and reduce our overall consumer electronics footprint, while providing a better product than you can get anywhere else. This includes using post-consumer-recycled aluminum and plastic in our products as well as recycled and recyclable packaging. > We have just started this journey, and we are continually looking for ways to reduce our footprint and be even healthier for the environment. We’re happy to get ideas and suggestions on how we can do this. The Framework Community is a great place to share this. |
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| Parent clearly means upgrade at time-of-purchase.
FTA: > Because the memory is non-upgradeable, we’re being deliberate in making memory pricing more reasonable than you might find with other brands. |
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| The bit you quoted back to me says, "the RAM is non-upgradable", which is what I said. Your interpretation (that the parent commenter misspoke) is more generous, though, so let's go with that. |
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| I'm thinking of buying one as well, and I never would've purchased any of their other products. But I have to agree with people who say this goes against Framework's mission. |
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| See https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/29141/interc...
At some point (if you go to high enough frequencies), the capacitance of the copper traces will become high enough (i.e. without any capacitor component connecting to a trace between a CPU and a RAM module) to prevent further frequency increases. One way to deal with that is to have shorter traces. This is exactly what CAMM memory modules do - they have shorter (total) traces than DIMM. Even shorter traces are possible if you get rid of modules completely (i.e. solder the RAM chips to the motherboard). Better yet is to place RAM and CPU cores on one chip, skipping even the motherboard traces between the CPU and RAM chips. |
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| you're right but loading the front page at http://frame.work shouldn't incur the "build your own" hit.
e-commerce is hard. that's why we get paid so well. hiring the smartest teenager that your nephew knows to setup some bullshit for $15/hr vs hiring a senior SRE at $100+/hr, when it directly leads to lost sales is a choice. the senior part also comes after having failed to scale in production, and learning the lessons there, leading to a site that stays up on the next black Friday/cyber Monday, and stands up to various ddos attacks. (this was before Cloudflare, mind you) |
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| There was no way to make it upgradable because of the architecture of the chip itself. They had no choice, but they are still delivering exceptional value in this design. |
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| Ryzen PRO SKU would enable these security features, https://www.amd.com/en/products/processors/laptop/ryzen-pro/...?
LLM opacity makes inference hardware a target for silent subversion and manipulation of LLM output. Ryzen PRO security features can be used to configure Linux and Windows systems that verify integrity on every system launch. |
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| There's no such desktop PC which offers 128 GB of VRAM. The Framework Desktop doesn't do that for the time being. It's not yet available.
There will be more options by the time this becomes available. |
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| Any chance this will get the amd security features for remote management (amd dash) ?
If there was a possibility to get amd dash working this would be the perfect system to use as a home server. |
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| That would be a sensible place to use a queue, too bad it's not constrained to there. I'm not familiar with how granular the CloudFlare feature is - could they have enabled it only for a portion of their site like https://frame.work/marketplace?
Otherwise, could be a good reason to use subdomains when architecting sites, say shop.framework.com. |
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| Not when every second line of code in the framework (haha) used really boils down to 250 calls and abstractions, when most of it is probably just strcpy() |
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| Up to 128 GB RAM available for running AI models.
Theoretically awesome, but this might have some interesting market consequences for everyone else. |
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| Right, like the mac studio ultra.
Or a dual socket AMD Turin. Or a grace+hopper (assuming you offload to the hopper). Latency is dictated by the laws of physics, more bandwidth is easy, but not cheap. |
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| The framework website currently has a strange message about putting users into queues just to view the homepage. Might be time to start thinking about setting up Varnish |
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| Sad that Framework laptops are still not available in Northern Europe, but I guess having regulation that makes new and small players unfeasible is important for some reason. |
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| RIP Norway (where I am). I thought it was all of Northern Europe. Most keyboards for Norway are the same as Swedish and Danish. Maybe I can do a gray import from Denmark or Sweden. |
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| Curiously, what do you feel is wrong about the 12" screen?
Two years ago, I switched from my 15" MacBook Pro to the 12" Framework, never looked back. What am I missing? |
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| LPCAMM2 memory is the answer, isn't it?
It's just not catching on, because of course it isn't. Manufacturers have no incentive to let you upgrade parts on your own. |
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| When money is involved and customers want to make payments to a limited resource (which the release batches are) I think being extra careful is quite important. |
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| To get an M4 Max so you can have 128GB, you need a macbook pro.
By the time the Framework ships the Mac Studio will have been updated to the M4 Max. Although 128GB will still probably be around $3k. |
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| Will it? I'm not aware of any other than the HP workstation. Maybe one or two of the Chinese mini PC manufacturers. But nothing you can buy as a mini-ITX motherboard. |
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| They should work just fine, sure peak bandwidth will be limited, but most workloads are not bottlenecked by I/O bandwidth on PCIe 4, but are limited by IOPs which should be decent on the 9100. |
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| 128GB is quite useless when the bandwidth is 256GB/s (~210 real world).
The sweet spot is 64GB but the M4 Pro Mini 64GB is a better deal at that RAM capacity. |
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| I run all the AI models without any issues with a desktop Radeon. I don't even think about it, just start the ollama docker and run the models.
Inference is not an issue with AMD. |
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| Nvidia must be extremely nervous about this - the most direct threat to the RTX4090.
But hey, they've refused to provide GPUs with lots of RAM at a cheap price so competition, y'all. |
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| if you're in the Local LLMs world this is an interesting choice. All they care about is lots of fast RAM. 128GB at $2k is a good price when compared to Mac Studios |
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| Wait, so I’d have to use ROCm for compute?
That sucks. I’ve had better luck with Intel’s drivers for their first series of dGPU’s. If this works with tinygrad’s AMD driver, that would then interest me. |
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| My hope is that the popularity of this hardware creates pressure to improve ROCm software support.
Me & my 7900 XTX will be quite grateful if it does. |
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| So cool for LLM inference, wish they had the cajones to ship some soldered lpddr in a laptop form factory for the bandwidth, but i guess ill have to wait for the lpcamm generation to arrive |
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| Imagine being able to swap components between their laptops and desktops! That would be pretty cool. Not sure how practically useful, but cool nonetheless. |
I _really_ hope they launch an AMD version (perhaps with an iGPU) soon after that. That and preferably with Libreboot support. This would make it the ideal portable laptop for me and thus I'd be able to (finally!) replace my X220T.