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in reply to Tio

I have a Framework laptop. I love that it's upgradable. Not because I want to go from 11th gen to 12th gen. I consider that morally wrong! as 11th gen is more than enough for years to come (for me).

But upgradability is good becaue in 2 or 3 years. I can upgrade to an (hopefully) AMD motherboard. Maybe update the webcam while I'm at it! And keep The rest of the laptop (the chasis, the speakers, the battery, the keybaord, touchpad, buttons and wires, expansion cards...)

in reply to Hojjat :ferris:

Yes that is a great thing indeed. But I, for one, don't see myself upgrading my laptop often at all. Maybe once a decade. If Framework would have a 16inch or 15 at least, then I would consider it. But 13inch is way too small for me I think. I need to do heavy video editing and designing books. Need a big screen.
in reply to Tio

I think there are a few good options with big screens out there. But in general, even if the monitor is huge (16") it still is way too small when it comes to productivity. You need an external monitor. (I have two huge ones at work with many windows open).

But everyone has their own workflow. My workflow is small and portable laptop. Huge and chunky workstation! :)

in reply to Hojjat :ferris:

I did most of my work for the past 5 years on a 17inch laptop. And it is big enough. Like I work on a 6h documentary that has at times 20 layers of video/audio tracks :D - idk if I could do this on a 13inch screen.
in reply to Tio

Long post

Regarding the expansion cards, one of the nice things is that you can swap around the *positioning* of the ports too. I do that fairly often.

Regarding repairability, yeah you might not need this level. But my last laptop had a bunch of things break like the trackpad and screen hinges, with literally no way to replace them. I'm willing to pay a little more to be sure I'll be able to repair and/or replace them if necessary.

in reply to Benjamin Hollon 🇺🇸🇲🇾🇮🇳🇦🇫

Regarding the expansion cards, one of the nice things is that you can swap around the positioning of the ports too. I do that fairly often.


Oh yeah thats super cool.

Regarding repairability, yeah you might not need this level. But my last laptop had a bunch of things break like the trackpad and screen hinges, with literally no way to replace them. I'm willing to pay a little more to be sure I'll be able to repair and/or replace them if necessary.


Yeah true, things can break and to be able to quickly repair them is definitely a huge deal.

in reply to Tio

In my case things like this end up coming down to "I might not need it, but I'm willing to pay extra so that I have it if I do." It's the same reason I do a lot of typing training; I may not save as much time by typing 120 wpm as I spent training myself to get to that point, but when I have something time-sensitive like writing down notes in class or quickly throwing together a document for a project while groupmates are waiting, it pays off.
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