People complain about the price but this product is not aimed at the general public. The average laptop buyer is not used to upgrading anything, they just buy the new thing. As it stands, it's a very cool concept for the enthusiast market. Congrats to framework for releasing such an "outside the conventions" product, let's see if in a few years it has been successful.
This... heck, I build computers and I almost never overclock even though I build them to be able to. Very few will do any serious upgrading on anything so this thing is definitely a niche atm... but it would be cool if they start pushing new industry standards.
The reason the "general public" is not "used to upgrade" is because you can't fcking upgrade anything. That stops now, culture must change, education is the way for the utopia.
Looks expensive at first, but if some parts inside gets broken or obsolete after years of use, you can simply replace/upgrade it with new parts for less price
@@sihamhamda47 I don't think the savings are as compelling as you think. Buying extended/more comprehensive warranty or insurance is cheaper if damage is what you are concerned about. In terms of upgrading later on, buying laptops on sale and selling your old laptop will also be cheaper than upgrading parts on the Framework. The long term cost savings (if there even are any) are marginal at best. This is not a product you get if you are looking to save money. You get it because you are very peculiar about your PC specs, the laptop layout, and the novelty factor.
@JarrodsTech as a software developer I really really appreciate you having a dedicated section on Linux support. Little things like this make you the best laptop reviewer IMO
eh, his section is pretty... brief... Doesn't touch on the topic of drivers and the like. Quite a lot of his videos that showcase laptops that have Nvidia GPUs and their compatibility with Linux don't really go deeper into things like Wayland support, driver issues and so on and forth.
@@jamesbrendan5170 true but for that to happen there needs to be an audience to speak up saying they want more linux info, pretty sure nobody in his team knows much of linux too.. Otherwise we can still rely on info from places like reddit, and other such forums.
@@jamesbrendan5170You only care about wayland and stuff if using nvidia, because fuck nvidia and their proprietary shit. On the other hand things just works on amd parts, which is the exact path framework chose to go to support both OS
@@linhusp2349 hey I am not familiar on the low level stuff here, are you saying that amd has better support for linux because nvidia apparently has proprietary drivers?
Framework sent out an email yesterday saying they made a fix for the mid-plate flex. Some people have their laptop already and Framework will offer the parts for those who want it. Awesome video, your answered some questions I have about the laptop and it was a thorough review. Thanks!
@@BouncingZeus It's impressive to see how transparent they have been throughout this whole process. When things have gone wrong, they've let everyone know and done their best to fix it, whether it was their fault or a vendor's.
Yeah, I have a 16" on pre-order for the purpose of my work making TH-cam videos and I have watched as Framework has tackled so many problems with their suppliers on power delivery, CPU heat, GPU drivers, firmware, etc. They have shown transparency and diligence in addressing ongoing issues which makes me confident they will continue to provide new and better features and expansions. The only piece missing is a 240W USB-C PD power supply as they recommend for their laptop when using the dGPU. I'm sure that they will have it as well though as soon as their supplier do. I also have to agree with the video that buying the Ryzen 9 isn't worth the money, since all benchmarks barely eek past the Ryzen 7.
@@jandjrandr That's awesome, I hope it serves you well. Elevated systems did a review on this laptop and used software to edit his videos, he had a rough time. I recommend checking out that video. I agree with you. In the past, I have spent way too much money on buying high end SKUs that are past the point of diminishing return. I learned my lesson, I'm not going to pay $200 more for a CPU that is 100 MHz faster. I can't wait to get my laptop. I didn't check my email until two days after framework launched pre-orders, so that put me in batch 7. I'm starting to obsessed over this laptop. The engineers at framework are amazing, I can't wait to see what upgrades they'll have for laptops in the future. I noticed that it costs $876 for owners of the original 11th Gen laptop to upgrade the battery, hinges, screen, top cover, web cam, speakers, and Ryzen 5 motherboard with the RZ616 WiFi module. A new bare bones laptop will cost $850. After seeing that, I need to be careful with my laptop and not buy every single upgrade framework offers, my laptop won't be cheaper if keep throwing money into it.
I believe the Framework 16 does support 240w charging, if you can find a charger that can do it. IIRC from the blog post Framework decided not to do that because inefficiency losses from converting 40v (What USB uses for 240w) to 12v (What laptop motherboards run on) were great enough that they'd need a (relatively) massive charger just to get rid of the extra heat. 22:30 Oh hey you mentioned it.
God knows how long I've waited for innovation like this. It's still pretty expensive, but I will begin to save for this. At least now I won't be stuck with a specific gpu/cpu pairing for years.
I don't really think that will work out. You forget that CPU and GPU are married to certain mainboards. At the end you end up with the problem that you will always be limited by your mainboard. It's even worse. I checked the website and every Mainboard component has a fixed GPU and CPU. You can only exchange the Mainboard with another one. So the author of the video is lying at this part. And don't forget that every electronic part has a life span. If your parts get 5 years old you are good. Every year longer and you are lucky. What I mean is when you upgrade your Mainboard CPU GPU module....it might only take another year until the rest has to be replaced.
@@schizofennec It's because most of the general public were either unaware of their existence or they had no access to them. I only found out about them in 2019 when I got a post-IBM thinkpad.
@@stemill1569 laptop prolly wont change in sizes. And remember what is mentioned, everything is open source that means even the chassis. It's similar to how the cabinets are treated at home. Therefore he is not lying. Yes motherboards are for 2 or 3 gens max but after that u can change for a better motherboard, and some motherboards do still support older gens. right now they have fixed GPU and CPU becoz they only have 2 versions of the laptop released. 13 and 16.
A large benefit of this laptop is the ability to upgrade RAM and storage at market prices. That brings the price more in line with equivalent laptops, especially now that a lot of them come with soldered LPDDR5 that makes it impossible to buy cheap and upgrade at home. Not to mention the macbooks that now cannot even have the SSD upgraded. I am seriously considering getting this laptop after university with the intention of adding 64gb of ram.
Yeah, that's why I don't buy Macs. You literally cannot upgrade or even replace anything broken except on the $7000 Mac Pro, and even then, only the propietary SSDs can be replaced because Apple is greedy.
@@cameronbosch1213 I actually thought even the SSD was nearly impossible to replace in new Macbooks. Something like you could only replace it with another one of identical size.
@@leonro It is. Only the Mac Pro can have its SSD replaced AND upgraded. The MacBooks all have soldered on SSDs, which are enough to prevent me from buying them.
This was a great review! Though, I do have to point out, I wish people realize that the best point about this laptop is the repairability, reusability and only then the upgradeability. The thing is, if you have some defect, if you spill something on it, if you drop it, a car goes over one of its corners, a million possibilities, well, in those cases, Framework is by far the best in: a) actually be able to repair it at all b) have the cheapest / most minimal repair done to it In relation to point a), most people have no idea how hostile towards repairing most other brands are. And how you might find youself forced to buy a new laptop or to replace big portions of it, even if only something very small needs to be replaced. Also that sometimes even if theoretically the repair can be done, realistically it cannot, because the OEM doesn't want to and because 3rd party repair shops (or you yourself if you want to) cannot find that component to buy it. And in other cases even if you have the component, the system might not accept it, unless you "calibrate it" aka use a special tool, that only the OEM has and doesn't share it, and if it doesn't want to do the repair, then you're, again, out of luck. So, yes, it is more expensive than a similarly spec laptop, and usually has other downsides too (like more flex, or worse speakers and touchpad etcetc). However, it is basically the only one that you know you can use for the 10 years. INCLUDING if Framework goes bust next year. Because almost everything is open sourced, the community, and you, can buy other parts, you can use other Framework as parts donor, and ultimately, you can even build those parts yourself (or with some help). This, again, in the absolute worst case where Framework disappears soon. If it doesn't, then getting spare parts is trivial. So, at least for me, the whole idea of the Framework laptop is that you have control over it, you can be sure that you buy it, you own it, and you can use it, even if unfortunate accidents happen. Also, if you upgrade it, there are already options to reuse the other components. Like, if you upgrade the Mobo + CPU (you have to upgrade both) then the old one you can put it in a small case and use it as a home/media server, like, say, for your TV. Or you can sell it to another one which needs to replace its mobo + CPU because the one it had got corroded by the Cola it spilled on it. Lastly, on the upgrade part, two more points: if you find something you like you can keep using it, while upgrading the rest. For example, a keyboard / touchpad / numpad / macropad that you REALLY like, you get it once, and can continue using it for 10 years, even if you upgrade the CPU and/or GPU 5 times in the mean time. That is, getting a better CPU now doesn't have to come to checking how that laptop's keyboard is. That is awesome, to me. Second point, if you have low budget, just getting the Framework itself is expensive, but the upgrades, if you do it to older hardware, can be cheap. Say, if you have a Framework 13 with the original 11th gen Intel CPU, if you upgrade NOW to a 12th gen Intel CPU, because it's not the latest one, you can get it 2nd hand much cheaper. So, in theory, you can spend now, say, $2500, and another, say $400-500 (ok, maybe $1000 with GPU) in 6 years for a not-latest-gen upgrade, and use this laptop for 10 years, without it getting horribly out of date. (and before you jump and say that it's unrealistic or stupid, I'm still using a laptop from 2016 with i7 6700 and GTX 1060. I got lucky to hit the best GPU, but ignoring that, the system is still usable and it doesn't feel that slow for most tasks (notably except gaming). Going forward, the upgrades will be even slower, so if you get a high end CPU now, like 7940HS or 14900HX, it will likely still be very good in 2034, it should age better than 4-core 6700HQ) Now really lastly, if you DO care about sustainability and pollution and all that, then you'd realize from what I wrote above, that this laptop, is, by far, the one which will have the lowest waste, if you think long term.
Exactly. The screen is probably as good as it gets unless they offer a Mini-LED, OLED, or 3 : 2 screen option. The CPU is probably more than adequate for most users like you said. Really only the GPU is the a bit weak, but given AMD doesn't really have anything more powerful for slimmer laptops in their lineup for 2023 or currently in 2024, this was probably the only sensible option, especially given Nvidia support on Linux is still somewhat sub-optimal. As for the open source parts, this is huge. If Framework does go out of business, the community can and likely will continue where Framework would leave off, kind of like all of those old 7 row keyboard ThinkPad mods. (Yes, this is seriously a thing!) And the repairability is by far the biggest thing for me. With Asus soldering on the RAM on the G14/G16, Alienware doing the same on their X series, and many other non gaming focused brands trying to make repair hard (like Dell's 2024 XPS lineup and of course the king and cause of all of this, Apple), Framework really stands out.
I hope you put Linux on that laptop in 2025 when Microsoft kills Windows 10 support and keep using it. As I say, if it still works for what you need, you probably don't need to replace it!
Yes, you are completely right with the fact that money shouldn't be prioritized over sustainability. For way too long, large corporations had used consumer psychology to lead us into thinking that we should just replace our stuff every few years. Because that is how they push their "point of sale" revenue. Back when my mother was borne. A toaster and a blender used to last for 10+ years, if not longer. Because they were made to last. Let alone repairable.
@@cameronbosch1213 Yeah, I put Gentoo on it, finally (loong overdue) a couple of months ago, between Christmas and the new year. It's been going pretty good, I really like the improvements in the workflow (I'm a web developer). On the gaming side I only tried a handful and so far it worked pretty good. But I'm still not convinced yet that I can play all the games I have on Windows. Though it's not perfect yet, I still have a lot to tinker on it. But it's already solid enough for me most of the time. I haven't even booted into Windows for more than a month, and that Windows is rock solid. And so far, I haven't seen any sign that I won't be able to make this better than Windows on all aspects. So far really, the most annoying part are the extremely stupid scrollbars in Firefox, Chromium and Steam (which uses Chrome or something Chrome based). For Firefox I managed to make it work, the scrollbars no longer autohide, are no longer very slim and I can middle click to scroll. Still inferior to what I had in Windows, but close enough. On Chromium and Steam ... yeah... whenever I middle click to scroll and nothing happens, I lose one brain cell.
I had completely given up on finding a "sustainable" (as much as can be) laptop, I almsot cried of joy when I stumbled upon this review!!!! Sustainibility is at the heart of everything for me but it clearly isn't the case for most gamers, so I never heard of that computer beforehand. I just heard that this computer has a lot of issues now. Hope it's still worth it!
Yeah , but we still have to wait so the prices will go down (we need more companies that does that so the prices will go down cuz it is kinda expensive now)
Thanks for actually recording the fan noise with a mic. I was wondering if it was one of those fans that made a high pitched whine but fortunately it sounds like that's not the case here.
Yeah, Framework has definitely worked a LOT on their fan tuning and cooling solutions. I reccently upgraded my FW13 to AMD and HOLY SHIT it's so much better. It's loud, but it's low enough in pitch that it actually helps in feeling like white noise. You're not distracted by it. And the cooling performance is somehow way better, too.
I believe that thinking of the Framework 16 as "a gaming laptop that could be upgraded" gives off the wrong impression. As mentioned in the video, its price-to-performance is not great compared to other more integrated options. It might make more sense to think of it as "a repairable, customizable, modular laptop that just so happens to be able to game too"
Yup! As they age, I hope more people will share and show how this can actually be very price competitive in the long run. Because of how repairable is. And how good / confortable is to a) choose what and when to upgrade and b) be sure that you can use the laptop for years, even 10 years, even if Framework goes bust tomorrow. No other brand is even close to that.
Yeah, someone told me here that we missed the point, that this laptop was meant mainly for repairability, and not for upgrading. Ok sure, diehard framework fans gonna fan, but I am not drinking that Kool aid then. Framework is not what i have been looking for in that case. I support right to repair, but this was not what I signed up for when thinking about a daily driver / gaming laptop. I look for price/performance first before other things. *and before anyone says it, yes I get it, this is not meant to be a gaming laptop GOD DAMN. I was just looking for reason to support your damn thing jeez. This was a laptop reviewed by a channel that mostly reviews gaming laptops. This marketing is misleading in that case.
@@RuyGedares_GuyRedaresyou missed one point: is a small recent company which is running this, obviously with major investors but as every new product it's very expensive at the beginning, obviously if framework can't lower costs this product don't deserve more support but at the moment I'm totally convinced that even with that price someone who supports "right to repair" have to support this just because if this product is successful it'll gonna do pressure in the entire laptop industry
Framework is today what Lenovo a decade or so ago. Not only can you upgrade the memory, storage, and GPU. You can also replace the mainboard (and processor along with it) and battery as well. The screen can also be replaced. No special tools required just a standard t5.
Here's to hoping they release something like a 7800m module. That'd be my "welp time to buy" sign for me. Having that visible upgrade goal to the to top end specs should be something available imo
Yep. The combo of feasible portability with docked power would have me sold. Someone surely will do a detachable watercooling mod too, to allow for a weight and space saving on the air-only heatsink, allowing it to be made with premium components (vrms etc) and flexible HX CPUs Which is what I'd expect from a premium priced option such as the framework in the first place
One idea that just came to me,... keyboard layouts. Imagine being able to switch between ortho-linear, querty style, dvorak, split-keyboard or other ideas whenever! Or, to make a keyboard module that would allow you to move around keys along with a built in firmware for key mapping/data storing (so you can change to different presets based on current layout). That would be so awesome!
I'm amazed that the Macbook got half a point. What was that for? Like a pitty point or something? There is literally nothing you can upgrade on those things. Hell, you can't even replace the lid angle sensor without getting some BS artificial error from Apple.
I had to replace my laptop keyboard recently and the process looked like pain (I brought it to a repair shop, couldn't do it myself as it require soldering and open everything else, remove the screen,...). This look like a great solution once I have money to upgrade
The issue is without a doubt the price. I love the ability of this. But price is still a hard sell. This is something mostly budget people need yet only premium prices can be afforded lol.
I'm pretty sure there'll be a version that'll be more affordable for budget gamers in a couple of years. It likely won't come with all those accessories though.
For me who buys stuff in used market this one will be perfect, because it will not be expesive to fix it and could buy even 5+ years old one and still fix and run. I hope rich folk could buy it for compine servive long enough to degrese it's price when they enter into mas production
Living on a budget still requires some forward thinking and planning. Do you buy a cheap pair of shoes that you'll definitely need to replace sooner rather than later, or save up for something more durable?
I'd love a ~100W RTX 4070 version of the GPU expansion module, seeing as my workload relies on CUDA/OptiX, personally. Then it'd be a must buy for me. They're SO CLOSE to being a dream laptop. Add a second M.2 2280 slot, bump the RAM max up to 128GB, use a 2560x1600 OLED, and that'd be a dream laptop
Right. The only reason to get a different one is if you need a larger/smaller body. Everything else can be upgraded. Heck, you could get a new chassis and put your old internals in it!
Jarrod vid. Automatic like and share. So regards the laptop. the GPU temps are stellar i hope that when a newer gpu comes they improve the cooling even more for a heavier gpu. cpu at 80 degrees at just 30w kinda worries me but just a little. and idk if there will be a Speaker module, that would be amazing my favourite laptop model is the 2021-23 zephyrus. had everything i wanted but. having the repairablility really appeals me, i've seen ppl rockin laptops from like 10 years ago, and still runing like a champ. framework have a real potential.
Yeah. 7 year old Clevo beast here still running great *touches wood*. Thing to remember, low-mid load cpu temp can be from poor cooling or from a preference for silence. I'm playing with a cheap 13900hx Acer right now and it's CPU thermals are worse in eco mode with no fan and 45W pl1 than in max turbo jet mode at 157W
The problem with the "future proof" stuff is usually it didn't last because not enough volume. Remember MXM upgradable laptops, it didn't last 2 Nvidia GPU gen then being cancelled with soldered parts later. I have an older 2013 MSI GT 60 laptop and you could replace your dead GPU, CPU, battery... witch is good enough for me. But if the upgradibility is only for the few years, better change every 10 years for the top. It's still good for environment and less costly. Still it's interesting and it should be the future of all laptop industry !
hoping they fix the price and maybe the weight issues in later gens, can def see this either being a game changer in the laptop game or a niche with a short lifespan in a couple years' time. also hoping they add more color scheme options on top of the ones that they alr have or give you a way to plastidip the external chassis parts to truly customize the laptop LOL
I don't think the price will ever be the same as other brands, considering everything is modular and removable makes it more expensive to manufacture compared to when you glue and solder everything together from the factory.
@@robise.5886 Yeah that's pretty much the issue people care about something being modular and upgradeable but you know what's number 1? It's always going to be price.
@@Pravculear How? isn't it 2k? while macbook pros are around 3k or more... with this much modularity and upgrade options I don't think they have to go cheaper.
It can turn into a Tablet once it reaches its end life. The fact it can become something else later on makes it a instant win that and it won't become E-waste like every other brand once a single part fails think HP Spectre Labtops or Asus once those things die they dead.
@@riccardo3092 It actually is. The thing is, with other brands, you're hoping the second laptop doesn't regress features like we saw with Lenovo in 2023.
This shouldn’t be an oddity. Not for everyone, but there’s a lot of functionality that I honestly don’t need the bleeding edge on. Allows focused usage.
There's a lot of cool ideas in this laptop, great product. One thing I wish they would have done a bit better is hiding the gaps that show the pieces are modular, it would be nice if it would integrate more seamlessly that way it still looked normal instead of like Lego blocks. But that's a me problem, and I still really like all the ideas they put into the different sections that are able to be swapped out.
Seems more like a gimmick though really. No GPU upgrades as of yet. And it's priced in such a way that it's cheaper to just buy a whole new computer than it is to upgrade componenets. I like the concept, it just doesn't have the pricing to match.
@@Patrick-y4d1zThey literally have offered CPU upgrades for three generations of Intel CPUs (11th, 12th, and 13th gen) and even AMD Ryzen 7040U series CPUs for the 13 inch model. The real problem is Nvidia. No other GPU manufacturer currently has good laptop GPUs above lower mid-range since 2022, when the AMD Radeon RX 6850M XT was quite competitive in gaming with the Nvidia RTX 3080 Ti. Unfortunately, they still haven't released anything suitable for slimmer laptops like the Framework Laptop 16, and given Nvidia seems to be not working with Framework at the moment, there's nothing Framework can do at the moment but either wait for AMD to put release Radeon S GPUs or try to work something out with Nvidia. And neither are a guarantee.
@Vhirsion I mean there isn't really a debate to be had. PC Gaming isn't cheaper in the long run really. And this laptop is still more expensive than just buying an equivalent one multiple times. Say this laptop cost £2000, and the regular one was £1000. After 4 years, you'd sell the £1000 one for £500. Meaning 4 years in after the first upgrade, you'll be at -£2000 vs £1500. Then after another 4 years you'd be at -£2000 vs -£2000, which sounds similar. So about 8 years to match. But by that point your PC is massively underspecced for half a decade compared to the alternative. To actually benefit, you'd need to then upgrade from here. So the new gaming laptop being -£500 net, would mean that the Framework laptop would need to be able to upgrade the entire system for less than £500, which given that they're 4 times that, isn't going to happen. It just doesn't make any sense from a financial perspective. You're paying such an enormous premium with the idea of being able to ugprade, but it's just cheaper by far to replace the entire laptop every 4 years and buy cheaper laptops. You could argue e-waste, but I doubt the difference is that significant, and you'd be selling the old laptops too, so somebody else would use it - then eventually gets sold for parts when no longer repairable. So yeah, Framework laptops make no sense really.
@@Patrick-y4d1z their current problem is AMD/Nvidia, Nvidia simply wont do something like that. its just not something theyre willing to do or allow. AMD is a problem because this is literally the best GPU they have in a laptop. if there was a higher option framework wouldve made it an option, but that doesnt exist. maybe future generations will have an intel combo, if intel is up for it. i personally hope for AMD to make higher tiers
@@bradhaines3142 yeah. manufacturers of parts is definitely going to be a problem too. I like the idea behind it, being able to repair and upgrade your own device. I just question whether or not it's actually better environmentally - we know it isn't financially or in terms of performance.
It probably won't last as long, but it's by far the coolest laptop to appear in the market in a very long time. It's literally Lego but functional. Everything works as it should be. Plus you can even customise it to your own liking and needs. Definitely a very good product.
Ngl Apple already doesn't last as long with their E waste designs like soldered ssd and ram. Bet this thing can last decades if the modules are still sold on their website. Around 60 dollars for smaller modules and 80 dollars for batteries n such is plenty.
The chassis itself should last at least 5 years, if we take into account that Framework's module designs are open source, therefore the upgradability is endless. Not only that, but I believe that in the future, people know what e-waste is and would like to reduce it. Framework proposes the solution
Why it wouldn't last as long (as long as who or what?) That, I'd say, the main idea of this laptop, the repairability and parts reusability. Unless it was done badly, which doesn't seem so (but too early to tell) or if you really dont' take care of it (but it will be a problem for other laptops too in this case) then it should last, say 10 years. If you think and plan, using this for 10 years, and only doing 1-2 CPU/GPU upgrades, but getting things that are not latest, so they're MUCH cheaper (including 2nd hand) then this can actually get to be pretty cheap. While still being great in most areas.
Jarrod can u plz include powercfg /a command output in every laptop to see if bios supports S3 sleep out of box because I'm fed of gaming laptops dying on me and before buying next one i need the solution. Day 1 of asking
Reminder - you can get similar levels of upgradability with a cheap used ThinkPad, like the T480. Same two RAM slots (up to 64GB RAM), two SSD slots, a Thunderbolt 3 port, hot-swappable batteries (24Wh internal and 24-72Wh external, which can be swapped with another charged battery without needing to shut the laptop off), similar screen upgradability, easily swappable keyboards, good I/O (no USB 2 ports). Costs just $200-250 used or refurbished.
Nah. You haven't seen how easily you can repair this. The upgradability is tremendous with this laptop compared to the T480 (and I loved my T480). Repair is super easy too. They have everything labeled and is easy to directly purchase. All the schematics are available to repair on your own if needed. This is next level
@@one_step_sideways but if you booted cyberpunk on a t480 youd get 3fps.. nah it wouldnt even launch the menus actually.. saying this is comparable to a t480 is like comparing a toyota yaris to a toyota supra.. sure theyre both reliable toyotas but one is for an enthusiaast and one is for a commuter not to mention alot of laptops have upgradeable ram, storage, and even batterys.. no other ones have upgradable ports, cpu or gpu for me the price to performance is a little too steep and i feel like after 5-6 years i just want a whole new machine not 500-600$ to drop a better gpu in the same machine thats lost its novelty an has 6 years of wear and tear on it, but gotta applaud them for getting this to market and hopefully putting some pressure on the industry to atleast keep storage, ram, and batteries user swappable
@@AndrewBrowner That's where you're wrong - the T480 has the Nvidia MX150 option, which is very overclockable and undervoltable. I got my T480 with the MX150, because it's was very cheap to have a dGPU like that. And if you really want to play this overrated unoptimized mediocre game at high settings and all, you can always use an eGPU enclosure. Get one from a friend for a week or two. If you don't have friends - then you shouldn't play videogames. I'd also like to point out that barely any new thin&light has two RAM slots. Gaming laptops - sure, they have to have them, but thin and light laptops like this year's ROG G14/G16, Dell XPS (absolute clownfest), and any Lenovo laptop have soldered RAM. You'll upgrade nothing und be happy.
I’ve said it elsewhere but this feels very much like a “version 1.0” product for early adopters. Hopefully with time, they will refine the design some more and be able to offer it at a lower price point.
It totally is a 1.0 product. But most would agree that they delivered with the Framework 13. And I think they'll deliver on this one too, though it certainly is much more difficult, and, yeah, if you're on the fence, waiting it to be better is certainly the way to go.
Have you looked at the prices to upgrade? It is £1100 in the UK for last year's Intel 13 gen! I am certain you can get a cheap 13 Gen laptop for that with good specs, an OLED display and brand new and shiny.
@@andyH_England and desktop parts are cheap? plus they can price it that high because it is "unique" but when it's common then it won't be far from their desktop counter parts
@@andyH_England In the context of using an old laptop (which will certainly be VERY relevant for Framework in 3+ years) the idea is to NOT get the latest tech/gen, because it's always the worst price/performance. Upgrading to that 13th gen (which for Framework still basically the latest gen, MTL just appeared) in 3 years, possiblity even 2nd hand, will be much cheaper.
Great review. Well, I ordered a FW16 at the end of Sept, and am in batch 12. Hope it comes soon. I have 2 slightly different HP x360s circa 2917 or so, and the keyboards on BOTH are bad. I am actually using a Logitech K400 on top the HP keyboard right now. If I had a FW, it would be like TWO MINUTES or less to replace it. I have had both of these HPs apart to replace batteries and upgrade RAM on one. The RAM is maxed out and isn't enough for me. FW answers all that and more. Yeah, it costs a little more. The irritation of the bad parts is a bigger irritation than the price. Waiting patiently.
I do wish they'd been able to get a Nvidia GPU. While I'd generally recommend an AMD GPU for desktop builders, that's not true on laptop. They'd be much better off with a 4060/4070. I'm sure there's a very good reason why they went this way, but hopefully we end up seeing Nvidia come to the Framework at some point.
The reason is Nvidia. They rule the use of their GPUs with an iron fist, and don't allow manufacturers to use them outside of the exact form factors they've approved. It's the same reason why Asus's XG Mobile external GPU cannot use desktop Nvidia GPUs. It's the reason why Framework cannot make an Nvidia GPU module in the foreseeable future. Nvidia is not your friend.
@@poemontyperacer That’s interesting, but I feel the need to point out that AMD and Framework aren’t your friend either, the only reason I’d have preferred Nvidia is because they consistently have better price to performance in the laptop segment.
@@MrHamof no it ain't that, according to linus from ltt, to which i saw today on his live about the F16, nvidia seems quite picky about mass producing with different designs than the usual ones. I could be wrong about this though, framework just started with AMD, now lets see for NVIDIA slowly but surely perhaps.
“It’s not meant for the general public so you can’t complain about the price!!!” “You’re paying the early adopter price, it will get cheaper when it’s widely adopted!!!” Paying the amount it costs for a better new laptop just to upgrade the GPU CPU RAM and Motherboard is fucking lame get over yourselves
I still think 6 years without upgrading or buying a new laptop is possible for some. But a gaming laptop like this would be more comfortable to use for longer unlike any other!
They do need to work on the fit and finish, and that trackpad is a bit small for the size of the laptop. That said, it's great that you can easily swap parts, and don't have to hunt down things like specific models with, say, the keyboard layout you want. Still, I'm hoping they eventually come out with a model with Wacom EMR.
I truly hope that the trail that theyre blazing catches on and proves to manufacturers that we want more modular laptops that don't have everything soldered to the board. Sure it's more expensive, but the doctor that you can swap everything means this laptop is a genuine investment in a way literally no other laptop is.
I don't get how people are complaining abt the price. Isn't it around 2k including many of the modules, that's waay cheaper than what Apple is ever gonna offer. Their pros with 32gb ram stands around 3k while this only costs 2 or 2.5k ig
It is not competing with Macs. This is a diehard Windows-targeted laptop for people who cannot accept that Windows laptops are getting less modular. For the price of this, there are many cheaper and better options in Windows-land.
@@andyH_England huh? it is competing with Mac. This aint only a windows targeted laptop at all... nothing is preinstalled u can install any OS on it. It can also become a hackintosh. Or is it that suffocating inside the apple bubble? This is targeted at people who believe that once someone buys a product he/she can do anything with it. That's why people want repairability scores of their phones and laptops now. It is defying industry standards of devices engineered to be E wastes. That includes manufacturers who think their products are better when everything is soldered and serialized to the motherboard. Including something as basic as STORAGE.
You can change the refresh rate manually via display settings in Windows or in a Linux DE like GNOME or KDE Plasma. It doesn't do so automatically though.
@@cameronbosch1213 I was specifically asking for the automatic behaviour. The manual way, ofc I am aware of it. Besides, my question was whether the display woild go dark for a second or not. Thanks anyway...
Jarrod!, take an ear at "Rise to Fall", totally missed out their new album "The fifth dimension", from June 2023, probably the very best Melodeath band we have in Spain. Enjoy it!
It’s really cool, but what really sucks is that swappable GPUs, which is something that was incredibly common on workstation and GaMiNg laptops not too long ago has become so obscure that a single laptop manufacturer bringing that functionality back is something worth celebrating
I think it really pays off in the long term, considered that everything works fine all the time. If you really can keep the Laptop for at least 2-3 gpu/cpu generations, by just swapping those parts to newer ones without having troubles on the other parts it should come even cheaper.
That's the thing though, 2 generations at that price point is what you're guaranteed if you just buy a 4060 gaming laptop. You need 3+ generations from a startup company to actually get your monies worth. This is also considering that when you do upgrade you will also likely be paying at around $500-800 every time you upgrade.
imagine the framework 20-> now we can switch displays, and upgrade processors. The old pc build enthusiast will turn into laptop building enthusiasts in the future.
Technically you can upgrade the CPU, I know you may referring to socketed CPU but they can't do anything about that, AMD and Intel don't make them that way anymore, only to be soldered
In the wise words of the Prophet Lizzo, IT'S ABOUT DAMN TIME! I can't wait for this product to mature, I'm so close to getting one myself for work. I wish that the GPU addon fit the 13-14in model because 17 is too big a laptop for me :( I also really REALLY want a touch screen... with a two-in-one option pretty please ;A;
Been waiting for your review on this enthusiast laptop from Framework. Honestly, I love it and it's quite janky. The only downside is it's price which for a moderate company like them is justifiable. I hope this becomes a success.
They did with the 13 recently. They just added Intel Meteor Lake CPUs, a new display, and a new webcam for all 13 inch models going back to the beginning.
The desirable config is about 2500USD. At those price range, 1) I'd need some power-limit controls 2) Promise that better GPU module with 16GB Vram will be available by like next 2-3 years (upgradable GPU is what is worth the price for a gaming laptop IMO) 3) some sort of promise for mainboard upgrade in future-- when mobile zen 5 & RX9000 series becomes available 4) perhaps a separate power connector/adapter just to power the GPU module(if GPU module requires more power) Given that there are barely any All-AMD laptops available, this basically is the choice. Thing you hope for AMD parts is slightly lower prices compared to intel or nVidia, that argument gets lost here.
@@reiniermoreno1653 @reiniermoreno1653 is it Illegal to do AI stuff ? Or want to have 16Gigs, It's a lot of money, $2500, I better get something that isn't going obsolete in 2-3 years.
@@harshivpatel6238 the only thing which 16GB would be useful on a laptop would be AI, why you have so much VRAM just to gaming? For 1080p those 8GB will be still fine for a decade
For the price, lack of two M.2 2280, no MXM slot which is a HUGE downer considering how many MXM cards there out there and still being made and released. No modular CPU even though thats possible using similar replaceable board design as they did with the GPU. Screens can easily be replaced on any laptop the real pain is finding the right screen and then sourcing it. For similar price however, HP Zbook offers MXM slots, more storage options, their 17 inch offers up to 3 x M.2 2280 slots, although CPU cannot be replaced, what a bummer. And frankly, vastly superior build quality, and you can put any HP MXM card in there, its verified, you can stick AMD RX 580 in there, or an RTX 3070, or maybe you fancy Radeon RX 6800M?
@@cameronbosch1213 MXM standard is open despite popular beliefs. Companies still make them as they are extremely popular with integrated and server related computers. Acer and HP still have top end workstation models that have MXM cards in them so its clearly not dead, maybe dead in your world, in the real world millions of these things are made each year, the RTX 3080 exists on MXM, even Intel A750 is on MXM
On the framework(and any other laptop with wifi 6e) you can upgrade to wifi 7 because wifi 6 and 7 use the same slot, and that means you could upgrade the 2022 legion 7 to wifi 7, and this is great since Lenovo hasn't made a laptop like the 2022 L7 again. It's either too expensive (legion 9, but includes everything the 2022 L7 has) or it doesn't have things like an ethernet port or a 4080/90 option(2024 L7) or it's missing features(Pro7). Let's hope Lenovo can revive the 2022 L7's quality and lower price.
I don't know what to think of Framework. The idea is just up my alley, and I am very used to upgrading my laptop to the degree possible. It just seems that it isn't really there yet. I really hope they pull it up, but just having purchased a high-end gaming laptop, and not living in the Anglo-Saxon world, I just have to pass for now.
I like it and kind of want to support this company, my only worry is will they be around to continue upgrading and how available are replacement parts.
Anyone remember Google's Project Ara from 2016? They were trying to release android phones with this same concept of modularity. If it succeeded, it would be great for the customers, but worse for the mobile market monopoly.
People complain about the price but this product is not aimed at the general public. The average laptop buyer is not used to upgrading anything, they just buy the new thing. As it stands, it's a very cool concept for the enthusiast market. Congrats to framework for releasing such an "outside the conventions" product, let's see if in a few years it has been successful.
This... heck, I build computers and I almost never overclock even though I build them to be able to. Very few will do any serious upgrading on anything so this thing is definitely a niche atm... but it would be cool if they start pushing new industry standards.
@@hang10wannabeI want to see CAMM be adopted
The reason the "general public" is not "used to upgrade" is because you can't fcking upgrade anything.
That stops now, culture must change, education is the way for the utopia.
Looks expensive at first, but if some parts inside gets broken or obsolete after years of use, you can simply replace/upgrade it with new parts for less price
@@sihamhamda47 I don't think the savings are as compelling as you think. Buying extended/more comprehensive warranty or insurance is cheaper if damage is what you are concerned about. In terms of upgrading later on, buying laptops on sale and selling your old laptop will also be cheaper than upgrading parts on the Framework. The long term cost savings (if there even are any) are marginal at best. This is not a product you get if you are looking to save money. You get it because you are very peculiar about your PC specs, the laptop layout, and the novelty factor.
@JarrodsTech as a software developer I really really appreciate you having a dedicated section on Linux support. Little things like this make you the best laptop reviewer IMO
eh, his section is pretty... brief...
Doesn't touch on the topic of drivers and the like. Quite a lot of his videos that showcase laptops that have Nvidia GPUs and their compatibility with Linux don't really go deeper into things like Wayland support, driver issues and so on and forth.
@@jamesbrendan5170 true but for that to happen there needs to be an audience to speak up saying they want more linux info, pretty sure nobody in his team knows much of linux too.. Otherwise we can still rely on info from places like reddit, and other such forums.
@@jamesbrendan5170You only care about wayland and stuff if using nvidia, because fuck nvidia and their proprietary shit. On the other hand things just works on amd parts, which is the exact path framework chose to go to support both OS
@@linhusp2349 hey I am not familiar on the low level stuff here, are you saying that amd has better support for linux because nvidia apparently has proprietary drivers?
As a non-software developer (I'm a 3D artists), I greatly appreciate Framework's compromise with Linux as well because Windows 11 sucks beyond repair.
9:01 it's over 9000!
And at 9:01 too
Plenty effort for very small detail
Netizens: We are not the same!
Me: Aww, someone said the comment I wanted to say.
what? over 9000!?!
Framework sent out an email yesterday saying they made a fix for the mid-plate flex. Some people have their laptop already and Framework will offer the parts for those who want it.
Awesome video, your answered some questions I have about the laptop and it was a thorough review. Thanks!
They seem to be very dedicated costumer service and care.
@@BouncingZeus It's impressive to see how transparent they have been throughout this whole process. When things have gone wrong, they've let everyone know and done their best to fix it, whether it was their fault or a vendor's.
Yeah, I have a 16" on pre-order for the purpose of my work making TH-cam videos and I have watched as Framework has tackled so many problems with their suppliers on power delivery, CPU heat, GPU drivers, firmware, etc. They have shown transparency and diligence in addressing ongoing issues which makes me confident they will continue to provide new and better features and expansions. The only piece missing is a 240W USB-C PD power supply as they recommend for their laptop when using the dGPU. I'm sure that they will have it as well though as soon as their supplier do. I also have to agree with the video that buying the Ryzen 9 isn't worth the money, since all benchmarks barely eek past the Ryzen 7.
@@jandjrandr That's awesome, I hope it serves you well. Elevated systems did a review on this laptop and used software to edit his videos, he had a rough time. I recommend checking out that video.
I agree with you. In the past, I have spent way too much money on buying high end SKUs that are past the point of diminishing return. I learned my lesson, I'm not going to pay $200 more for a CPU that is 100 MHz faster. I can't wait to get my laptop. I didn't check my email until two days after framework launched pre-orders, so that put me in batch 7. I'm starting to obsessed over this laptop. The engineers at framework are amazing, I can't wait to see what upgrades they'll have for laptops in the future. I noticed that it costs $876 for owners of the original 11th Gen laptop to upgrade the battery, hinges, screen, top cover, web cam, speakers, and Ryzen 5 motherboard with the RZ616 WiFi module. A new bare bones laptop will cost $850. After seeing that, I need to be careful with my laptop and not buy every single upgrade framework offers, my laptop won't be cheaper if keep throwing money into it.
I believe the Framework 16 does support 240w charging, if you can find a charger that can do it. IIRC from the blog post Framework decided not to do that because inefficiency losses from converting 40v (What USB uses for 240w) to 12v (What laptop motherboards run on) were great enough that they'd need a (relatively) massive charger just to get rid of the extra heat.
22:30 Oh hey you mentioned it.
God knows how long I've waited for innovation like this. It's still pretty expensive, but I will begin to save for this. At least now I won't be stuck with a specific gpu/cpu pairing for years.
also can upgrade at your budget/time, not invest into a new laptop ever 3-4 years.
I don't really think that will work out.
You forget that CPU and GPU are married to certain mainboards.
At the end you end up with the problem that you will always be limited by your mainboard.
It's even worse. I checked the website and every Mainboard component has a fixed GPU and CPU.
You can only exchange the Mainboard with another one.
So the author of the video is lying at this part.
And don't forget that every electronic part has a life span. If your parts get 5 years old you are good. Every year longer and you are lucky.
What I mean is when you upgrade your Mainboard CPU GPU module....it might only take another year until the rest has to be replaced.
people have forgotten that we had DIY laptops in 2012, and that gpu upgrades have been a thing for ages
@@schizofennec It's because most of the general public were either unaware of their existence or they had no access to them. I only found out about them in 2019 when I got a post-IBM thinkpad.
@@stemill1569 laptop prolly wont change in sizes. And remember what is mentioned, everything is open source that means even the chassis. It's similar to how the cabinets are treated at home. Therefore he is not lying. Yes motherboards are for 2 or 3 gens max but after that u can change for a better motherboard, and some motherboards do still support older gens. right now they have fixed GPU and CPU becoz they only have 2 versions of the laptop released. 13 and 16.
A large benefit of this laptop is the ability to upgrade RAM and storage at market prices. That brings the price more in line with equivalent laptops, especially now that a lot of them come with soldered LPDDR5 that makes it impossible to buy cheap and upgrade at home. Not to mention the macbooks that now cannot even have the SSD upgraded. I am seriously considering getting this laptop after university with the intention of adding 64gb of ram.
Yeah, that's why I don't buy Macs. You literally cannot upgrade or even replace anything broken except on the $7000 Mac Pro, and even then, only the propietary SSDs can be replaced because Apple is greedy.
@@cameronbosch1213 I actually thought even the SSD was nearly impossible to replace in new Macbooks. Something like you could only replace it with another one of identical size.
@@leonro It is. Only the Mac Pro can have its SSD replaced AND upgraded. The MacBooks all have soldered on SSDs, which are enough to prevent me from buying them.
@@cameronbosch1213they also have a tendency to fry themselves and the certified repair shops claiming it was water damage.
20:53 Props for the Linux support section, even if its simple, we are really proud of the official support from the Framework folks!
That gave me more confidence to buy.
I love this kind of upgradeability and repairability. Should be industry standard.
This was a great review!
Though, I do have to point out, I wish people realize that the best point about this laptop is the repairability, reusability and only then the upgradeability.
The thing is, if you have some defect, if you spill something on it, if you drop it, a car goes over one of its corners, a million possibilities, well, in those cases, Framework is by far the best in:
a) actually be able to repair it at all
b) have the cheapest / most minimal repair done to it
In relation to point a), most people have no idea how hostile towards repairing most other brands are. And how you might find youself forced to buy a new laptop or to replace big portions of it, even if only something very small needs to be replaced. Also that sometimes even if theoretically the repair can be done, realistically it cannot, because the OEM doesn't want to and because 3rd party repair shops (or you yourself if you want to) cannot find that component to buy it. And in other cases even if you have the component, the system might not accept it, unless you "calibrate it" aka use a special tool, that only the OEM has and doesn't share it, and if it doesn't want to do the repair, then you're, again, out of luck.
So, yes, it is more expensive than a similarly spec laptop, and usually has other downsides too (like more flex, or worse speakers and touchpad etcetc). However, it is basically the only one that you know you can use for the 10 years. INCLUDING if Framework goes bust next year. Because almost everything is open sourced, the community, and you, can buy other parts, you can use other Framework as parts donor, and ultimately, you can even build those parts yourself (or with some help). This, again, in the absolute worst case where Framework disappears soon. If it doesn't, then getting spare parts is trivial.
So, at least for me, the whole idea of the Framework laptop is that you have control over it, you can be sure that you buy it, you own it, and you can use it, even if unfortunate accidents happen. Also, if you upgrade it, there are already options to reuse the other components. Like, if you upgrade the Mobo + CPU (you have to upgrade both) then the old one you can put it in a small case and use it as a home/media server, like, say, for your TV. Or you can sell it to another one which needs to replace its mobo + CPU because the one it had got corroded by the Cola it spilled on it.
Lastly, on the upgrade part, two more points: if you find something you like you can keep using it, while upgrading the rest. For example, a keyboard / touchpad / numpad / macropad that you REALLY like, you get it once, and can continue using it for 10 years, even if you upgrade the CPU and/or GPU 5 times in the mean time. That is, getting a better CPU now doesn't have to come to checking how that laptop's keyboard is. That is awesome, to me. Second point, if you have low budget, just getting the Framework itself is expensive, but the upgrades, if you do it to older hardware, can be cheap. Say, if you have a Framework 13 with the original 11th gen Intel CPU, if you upgrade NOW to a 12th gen Intel CPU, because it's not the latest one, you can get it 2nd hand much cheaper. So, in theory, you can spend now, say, $2500, and another, say $400-500 (ok, maybe $1000 with GPU) in 6 years for a not-latest-gen upgrade, and use this laptop for 10 years, without it getting horribly out of date. (and before you jump and say that it's unrealistic or stupid, I'm still using a laptop from 2016 with i7 6700 and GTX 1060. I got lucky to hit the best GPU, but ignoring that, the system is still usable and it doesn't feel that slow for most tasks (notably except gaming). Going forward, the upgrades will be even slower, so if you get a high end CPU now, like 7940HS or 14900HX, it will likely still be very good in 2034, it should age better than 4-core 6700HQ)
Now really lastly, if you DO care about sustainability and pollution and all that, then you'd realize from what I wrote above, that this laptop, is, by far, the one which will have the lowest waste, if you think long term.
Exactly. The screen is probably as good as it gets unless they offer a Mini-LED, OLED, or 3 : 2 screen option. The CPU is probably more than adequate for most users like you said. Really only the GPU is the a bit weak, but given AMD doesn't really have anything more powerful for slimmer laptops in their lineup for 2023 or currently in 2024, this was probably the only sensible option, especially given Nvidia support on Linux is still somewhat sub-optimal.
As for the open source parts, this is huge. If Framework does go out of business, the community can and likely will continue where Framework would leave off, kind of like all of those old 7 row keyboard ThinkPad mods. (Yes, this is seriously a thing!) And the repairability is by far the biggest thing for me. With Asus soldering on the RAM on the G14/G16, Alienware doing the same on their X series, and many other non gaming focused brands trying to make repair hard (like Dell's 2024 XPS lineup and of course the king and cause of all of this, Apple), Framework really stands out.
I hope you put Linux on that laptop in 2025 when Microsoft kills Windows 10 support and keep using it. As I say, if it still works for what you need, you probably don't need to replace it!
Yes, you are completely right with the fact that money shouldn't be prioritized over sustainability. For way too long, large corporations had used consumer psychology to lead us into thinking that we should just replace our stuff every few years. Because that is how they push their "point of sale" revenue. Back when my mother was borne. A toaster and a blender used to last for 10+ years, if not longer. Because they were made to last. Let alone repairable.
@@cameronbosch1213 Yeah, I put Gentoo on it, finally (loong overdue) a couple of months ago, between Christmas and the new year. It's been going pretty good, I really like the improvements in the workflow (I'm a web developer). On the gaming side I only tried a handful and so far it worked pretty good. But I'm still not convinced yet that I can play all the games I have on Windows.
Though it's not perfect yet, I still have a lot to tinker on it. But it's already solid enough for me most of the time. I haven't even booted into Windows for more than a month, and that Windows is rock solid. And so far, I haven't seen any sign that I won't be able to make this better than Windows on all aspects.
So far really, the most annoying part are the extremely stupid scrollbars in Firefox, Chromium and Steam (which uses Chrome or something Chrome based). For Firefox I managed to make it work, the scrollbars no longer autohide, are no longer very slim and I can middle click to scroll. Still inferior to what I had in Windows, but close enough. On Chromium and Steam ... yeah... whenever I middle click to scroll and nothing happens, I lose one brain cell.
I had completely given up on finding a "sustainable" (as much as can be) laptop, I almsot cried of joy when I stumbled upon this review!!!! Sustainibility is at the heart of everything for me but it clearly isn't the case for most gamers, so I never heard of that computer beforehand. I just heard that this computer has a lot of issues now. Hope it's still worth it!
this should be the new normal for how laptops are designed , having powerful hardware that can me moved around at the users will.
Appreciate the fan noise test, couldnt easily find another review with fan noise, not even Linus even mentions fan noise in review
>69 upgrade score. My life is complete
easy market
nice
1:36 i thought its two hours DAAAAAAAAAMMMNNN this laptop is really over 9000
This is the greatest hope of the entire industry
Yea, tell me about it. 😊
Yeah , but we still have to wait so the prices will go down (we need more companies that does that so the prices will go down cuz it is kinda expensive now)
Thanks for actually recording the fan noise with a mic. I was wondering if it was one of those fans that made a high pitched whine but fortunately it sounds like that's not the case here.
Yeah, Framework has definitely worked a LOT on their fan tuning and cooling solutions. I reccently upgraded my FW13 to AMD and HOLY SHIT it's so much better. It's loud, but it's low enough in pitch that it actually helps in feeling like white noise. You're not distracted by it. And the cooling performance is somehow way better, too.
@@benjiro8793 This is also true. But Framework's thermal solution is also miles better than it used to be.
A little dismayed that the laptop isnt available everywhere yet. Been waiting for years.
Yeah unfortunately it takes years to completely achieve a paradigm shift like this. Let's hope it continues to grow and one day becomes mainstream.
It shouldn't be too long. A lot of intelligent people are involved in the project.
I'm a scientist living near the North Pole and I DEMAND a Framework laptop to be delivered in an instant hahaha 🌈
I believe that thinking of the Framework 16 as "a gaming laptop that could be upgraded" gives off the wrong impression. As mentioned in the video, its price-to-performance is not great compared to other more integrated options. It might make more sense to think of it as "a repairable, customizable, modular laptop that just so happens to be able to game too"
Yup! As they age, I hope more people will share and show how this can actually be very price competitive in the long run. Because of how repairable is. And how good / confortable is to a) choose what and when to upgrade and b) be sure that you can use the laptop for years, even 10 years, even if Framework goes bust tomorrow. No other brand is even close to that.
Yeah, someone told me here that we missed the point, that this laptop was meant mainly for repairability, and not for upgrading.
Ok sure, diehard framework fans gonna fan, but I am not drinking that Kool aid then. Framework is not what i have been looking for in that case.
I support right to repair, but this was not what I signed up for when thinking about a daily driver / gaming laptop. I look for price/performance first before other things.
*and before anyone says it, yes I get it, this is not meant to be a gaming laptop GOD DAMN. I was just looking for reason to support your damn thing jeez.
This was a laptop reviewed by a channel that mostly reviews gaming laptops.
This marketing is misleading in that case.
@@RuyGedares_GuyRedaresyou missed one point: is a small recent company which is running this, obviously with major investors but as every new product it's very expensive at the beginning, obviously if framework can't lower costs this product don't deserve more support but at the moment I'm totally convinced that even with that price someone who supports "right to repair" have to support this just because if this product is successful it'll gonna do pressure in the entire laptop industry
Imagine not understanding the definition of an upgrade
Framework is today what Lenovo a decade or so ago. Not only can you upgrade the memory, storage, and GPU. You can also replace the mainboard (and processor along with it) and battery as well. The screen can also be replaced. No special tools required just a standard t5.
Here's to hoping they release something like a 7800m module. That'd be my "welp time to buy" sign for me. Having that visible upgrade goal to the to top end specs should be something available imo
Yep. The combo of feasible portability with docked power would have me sold. Someone surely will do a detachable watercooling mod too, to allow for a weight and space saving on the air-only heatsink, allowing it to be made with premium components (vrms etc) and flexible HX CPUs
Which is what I'd expect from a premium priced option such as the framework in the first place
Yo, Jarrod’s Tech just helped me choose my gaming laptop. Hats off, Jarrod.😊
One idea that just came to me,... keyboard layouts. Imagine being able to switch between ortho-linear, querty style, dvorak, split-keyboard or other ideas whenever! Or, to make a keyboard module that would allow you to move around keys along with a built in firmware for key mapping/data storing (so you can change to different presets based on current layout). That would be so awesome!
I'm amazed that the Macbook got half a point. What was that for? Like a pitty point or something? There is literally nothing you can upgrade on those things. Hell, you can't even replace the lid angle sensor without getting some BS artificial error from Apple.
Battery is removable. That's literally it. The screws are propietary pentalobe screws and everything else is soldered.
@@cameronbosch1213 Yeah, but won't it disable some of the features if the battery isn't the same one it shipped with from the factory?
@@mitchib1440 On iPhones or iPads, yes, but I'm not 100% sure on MacBooks. Definitely don't buy one if you value right to repair even a little.
I had to replace my laptop keyboard recently and the process looked like pain (I brought it to a repair shop, couldn't do it myself as it require soldering and open everything else, remove the screen,...). This look like a great solution once I have money to upgrade
The issue is without a doubt the price. I love the ability of this. But price is still a hard sell. This is something mostly budget people need yet only premium prices can be afforded lol.
I'm pretty sure there'll be a version that'll be more affordable for budget gamers in a couple of years. It likely won't come with all those accessories though.
But if you just count how much your last 2 laptop cost (and how you might have had to throw it away because of a single little failure, its fine...
For me who buys stuff in used market this one will be perfect, because it will not be expesive to fix it and could buy even 5+ years old one and still fix and run.
I hope rich folk could buy it for compine servive long enough to degrese it's price when they enter into mas production
@@iraklimgeladze5223 Yeah same lmfao.
Living on a budget still requires some forward thinking and planning. Do you buy a cheap pair of shoes that you'll definitely need to replace sooner rather than later, or save up for something more durable?
If the Framework 16 is successful, I can’t wait to see what they do to build a Framework 18.
I'd love a ~100W RTX 4070 version of the GPU expansion module, seeing as my workload relies on CUDA/OptiX, personally. Then it'd be a must buy for me. They're SO CLOSE to being a dream laptop. Add a second M.2 2280 slot, bump the RAM max up to 128GB, use a 2560x1600 OLED, and that'd be a dream laptop
This had to have unbelievable amount of planning. For the panels to work the way they do.
I love the idea of this. People complain about the price but tbh it’s not that much if it’s the only laptop I will need.
Right. The only reason to get a different one is if you need a larger/smaller body. Everything else can be upgraded.
Heck, you could get a new chassis and put your old internals in it!
Now this is what I cal upgradability! The Framework laptop is amazing, we need to see this in more laptops!
Jarrod vid. Automatic like and share.
So regards the laptop. the GPU temps are stellar i hope that when a newer gpu comes they improve the cooling even more for a heavier gpu. cpu at 80 degrees at just 30w kinda worries me but just a little. and idk if there will be a Speaker module, that would be amazing my favourite laptop model is the 2021-23 zephyrus. had everything i wanted but. having the repairablility really appeals me, i've seen ppl rockin laptops from like 10 years ago, and still runing like a champ. framework have a real potential.
Yeah. 7 year old Clevo beast here still running great *touches wood*. Thing to remember, low-mid load cpu temp can be from poor cooling or from a preference for silence.
I'm playing with a cheap 13900hx Acer right now and it's CPU thermals are worse in eco mode with no fan and 45W pl1 than in max turbo jet mode at 157W
9:09.
Nice.
It's over nine thousand!
@@JarrodsTechYes, most upgradeable gaming laptop of all time!
@@JarrodsTech crushes my non existent google glass (closest thing to a scouter)
😂😂😂😂😂
The problem with the "future proof" stuff is usually it didn't last because not enough volume. Remember MXM upgradable laptops, it didn't last 2 Nvidia GPU gen then being cancelled with soldered parts later. I have an older 2013 MSI GT 60 laptop and you could replace your dead GPU, CPU, battery... witch is good enough for me. But if the upgradibility is only for the few years, better change every 10 years for the top. It's still good for environment and less costly.
Still it's interesting and it should be the future of all laptop industry !
The first generation of Frameworks was quite upgradeable. So this generation should be as well.
There is a battery charge threshold in the BIOS! Amazing! Above and beyond! I've totally forgotten about Thinkpads. Plus I can even game on it.
May be custom framework keyboard that has trackpoint?
hoping they fix the price and maybe the weight issues in later gens, can def see this either being a game changer in the laptop game or a niche with a short lifespan in a couple years' time.
also hoping they add more color scheme options on top of the ones that they alr have or give you a way to plastidip the external chassis parts to truly customize the laptop LOL
I don't think the price will ever be the same as other brands, considering everything is modular and removable makes it more expensive to manufacture compared to when you glue and solder everything together from the factory.
@@robise.5886 Yeah that's pretty much the issue people care about something being modular and upgradeable but you know what's number 1? It's always going to be price.
Given the modularity, I don’t see that price coming down any time soon.
yeah, the price definitely has to come down if they want framework to be a mainstream thing.
@@Pravculear How? isn't it 2k? while macbook pros are around 3k or more... with this much modularity and upgrade options I don't think they have to go cheaper.
price is double of a normal laptop
But isnt it cheaper for the long run?
@@Bayofthe91st nope
It can turn into a Tablet once it reaches its end life. The fact it can become something else later on makes it a instant win that and it won't become E-waste like every other brand once a single part fails think HP Spectre Labtops or Asus once those things die they dead.
@@riccardo3092 It actually is. The thing is, with other brands, you're hoping the second laptop doesn't regress features like we saw with Lenovo in 2023.
22:52 - 22:58
Still lighter than my g18! and i can finally put the trackpad in the damn center while still having a numpad. I'm liking this.
I really hope they succeed, cuz once laptops like the Framework 16 come down to about $1000-1500 CAD, I really want one.
This shouldn’t be an oddity. Not for everyone, but there’s a lot of functionality that I honestly don’t need the bleeding edge on. Allows focused usage.
this laptop is insanely cool on another level 👀
When I saw this on Hardware Canucks, I immediately came to your channel (hoping) for a more in-depth review of the laptop.
HC really became so bad recently. Eber really stopped providing good reviews; it got so bad I unsubscribed in early 2024.
There's a lot of cool ideas in this laptop, great product. One thing I wish they would have done a bit better is hiding the gaps that show the pieces are modular, it would be nice if it would integrate more seamlessly that way it still looked normal instead of like Lego blocks. But that's a me problem, and I still really like all the ideas they put into the different sections that are able to be swapped out.
It's upgradibility is over 9000!!!
This is surely the way to go, the future. Other manufactures should adopt this.
in your dream maybe
As always enjoy seeing metal represented with the In Flames shirt. Can't help but wonder if the shirt is because the new album dropped yesterday. lol
Coincidence, but I'm seeing them live tonight!
@@JarrodsTech LUCKY! I sense a new In Flames shirt making an appearance in an upcoming video. lol
What does the scouter say about the upgrade score ?
It's over 9000.
We have a new king in upgrade section now 😊
Seems more like a gimmick though really.
No GPU upgrades as of yet. And it's priced in such a way that it's cheaper to just buy a whole new computer than it is to upgrade componenets.
I like the concept, it just doesn't have the pricing to match.
@@Patrick-y4d1zThey literally have offered CPU upgrades for three generations of Intel CPUs (11th, 12th, and 13th gen) and even AMD Ryzen 7040U series CPUs for the 13 inch model. The real problem is Nvidia. No other GPU manufacturer currently has good laptop GPUs above lower mid-range since 2022, when the AMD Radeon RX 6850M XT was quite competitive in gaming with the Nvidia RTX 3080 Ti. Unfortunately, they still haven't released anything suitable for slimmer laptops like the Framework Laptop 16, and given Nvidia seems to be not working with Framework at the moment, there's nothing Framework can do at the moment but either wait for AMD to put release Radeon S GPUs or try to work something out with Nvidia. And neither are a guarantee.
@Vhirsion
I mean there isn't really a debate to be had.
PC Gaming isn't cheaper in the long run really.
And this laptop is still more expensive than just buying an equivalent one multiple times.
Say this laptop cost £2000, and the regular one was £1000.
After 4 years, you'd sell the £1000 one for £500. Meaning 4 years in after the first upgrade, you'll be at -£2000 vs £1500. Then after another 4 years you'd be at -£2000 vs -£2000, which sounds similar. So about 8 years to match. But by that point your PC is massively underspecced for half a decade compared to the alternative.
To actually benefit, you'd need to then upgrade from here. So the new gaming laptop being -£500 net, would mean that the Framework laptop would need to be able to upgrade the entire system for less than £500, which given that they're 4 times that, isn't going to happen.
It just doesn't make any sense from a financial perspective. You're paying such an enormous premium with the idea of being able to ugprade, but it's just cheaper by far to replace the entire laptop every 4 years and buy cheaper laptops.
You could argue e-waste, but I doubt the difference is that significant, and you'd be selling the old laptops too, so somebody else would use it - then eventually gets sold for parts when no longer repairable.
So yeah, Framework laptops make no sense really.
@@Patrick-y4d1z their current problem is AMD/Nvidia, Nvidia simply wont do something like that. its just not something theyre willing to do or allow. AMD is a problem because this is literally the best GPU they have in a laptop. if there was a higher option framework wouldve made it an option, but that doesnt exist.
maybe future generations will have an intel combo, if intel is up for it. i personally hope for AMD to make higher tiers
@@bradhaines3142 yeah. manufacturers of parts is definitely going to be a problem too.
I like the idea behind it, being able to repair and upgrade your own device. I just question whether or not it's actually better environmentally - we know it isn't financially or in terms of performance.
This is cleary the best thing , this level of customization is so good
It probably won't last as long, but it's by far the coolest laptop to appear in the market in a very long time. It's literally Lego but functional. Everything works as it should be. Plus you can even customise it to your own liking and needs. Definitely a very good product.
Ngl Apple already doesn't last as long with their E waste designs like soldered ssd and ram. Bet this thing can last decades if the modules are still sold on their website. Around 60 dollars for smaller modules and 80 dollars for batteries n such is plenty.
The chassis itself should last at least 5 years, if we take into account that Framework's module designs are open source, therefore the upgradability is endless. Not only that, but I believe that in the future, people know what e-waste is and would like to reduce it. Framework proposes the solution
Why it wouldn't last as long (as long as who or what?) That, I'd say, the main idea of this laptop, the repairability and parts reusability. Unless it was done badly, which doesn't seem so (but too early to tell) or if you really dont' take care of it (but it will be a problem for other laptops too in this case) then it should last, say 10 years.
If you think and plan, using this for 10 years, and only doing 1-2 CPU/GPU upgrades, but getting things that are not latest, so they're MUCH cheaper (including 2nd hand) then this can actually get to be pretty cheap. While still being great in most areas.
Jarrod can u plz include powercfg /a command output in every laptop to see if bios supports S3 sleep out of box because I'm fed of gaming laptops dying on me and before buying next one i need the solution.
Day 1 of asking
Reminder - you can get similar levels of upgradability with a cheap used ThinkPad, like the T480. Same two RAM slots (up to 64GB RAM), two SSD slots, a Thunderbolt 3 port, hot-swappable batteries (24Wh internal and 24-72Wh external, which can be swapped with another charged battery without needing to shut the laptop off), similar screen upgradability, easily swappable keyboards, good I/O (no USB 2 ports). Costs just $200-250 used or refurbished.
Nah. You haven't seen how easily you can repair this.
The upgradability is tremendous with this laptop compared to the T480 (and I loved my T480).
Repair is super easy too. They have everything labeled and is easy to directly purchase. All the schematics are available to repair on your own if needed. This is next level
@@Peaches4Rent I can buy 5-7x T480 for the price of a Framework 16. Imagine how many donor parts I would have.
@@one_step_sideways fair enough.
@@one_step_sideways but if you booted cyberpunk on a t480 youd get 3fps.. nah it wouldnt even launch the menus actually.. saying this is comparable to a t480 is like comparing a toyota yaris to a toyota supra.. sure theyre both reliable toyotas but one is for an enthusiaast and one is for a commuter
not to mention alot of laptops have upgradeable ram, storage, and even batterys.. no other ones have upgradable ports, cpu or gpu
for me the price to performance is a little too steep and i feel like after 5-6 years i just want a whole new machine not 500-600$ to drop a better gpu in the same machine thats lost its novelty an has 6 years of wear and tear on it, but gotta applaud them for getting this to market and hopefully putting some pressure on the industry to atleast keep storage, ram, and batteries user swappable
@@AndrewBrowner That's where you're wrong - the T480 has the Nvidia MX150 option, which is very overclockable and undervoltable. I got my T480 with the MX150, because it's was very cheap to have a dGPU like that. And if you really want to play this overrated unoptimized mediocre game at high settings and all, you can always use an eGPU enclosure. Get one from a friend for a week or two. If you don't have friends - then you shouldn't play videogames.
I'd also like to point out that barely any new thin&light has two RAM slots. Gaming laptops - sure, they have to have them, but thin and light laptops like this year's ROG G14/G16, Dell XPS (absolute clownfest), and any Lenovo laptop have soldered RAM. You'll upgrade nothing und be happy.
I’ve said it elsewhere but this feels very much like a “version 1.0” product for early adopters. Hopefully with time, they will refine the design some more and be able to offer it at a lower price point.
Hey! You're that one guy from Notebooktalk!
It totally is a 1.0 product. But most would agree that they delivered with the Framework 13. And I think they'll deliver on this one too, though it certainly is much more difficult, and, yeah, if you're on the fence, waiting it to be better is certainly the way to go.
This is sooo good!
I would definitely do the jump on this brand the day they change their screen to mini led or oled ! such a beautiful piece
there should be universal module parts for laptops. you can resurrect an older gaming laptop with an old high end cpu by installing a better gpu
Have you looked at the prices to upgrade? It is £1100 in the UK for last year's Intel 13 gen! I am certain you can get a cheap 13 Gen laptop for that with good specs, an OLED display and brand new and shiny.
@@andyH_England and desktop parts are cheap? plus they can price it that high because it is "unique" but when it's common then it won't be far from their desktop counter parts
@@andyH_England In the context of using an old laptop (which will certainly be VERY relevant for Framework in 3+ years) the idea is to NOT get the latest tech/gen, because it's always the worst price/performance. Upgrading to that 13th gen (which for Framework still basically the latest gen, MTL just appeared) in 3 years, possiblity even 2nd hand, will be much cheaper.
Great review.
Well, I ordered a FW16 at the end of Sept, and am in batch 12. Hope it comes soon.
I have 2 slightly different HP x360s circa 2917 or so, and the keyboards on BOTH are bad. I am actually using a Logitech K400 on top the HP keyboard right now.
If I had a FW, it would be like TWO MINUTES or less to replace it. I have had both of these HPs apart to replace batteries and upgrade RAM on one. The RAM is maxed out and isn't enough for me.
FW answers all that and more. Yeah, it costs a little more. The irritation of the bad parts is a bigger irritation than the price.
Waiting patiently.
I do wish they'd been able to get a Nvidia GPU. While I'd generally recommend an AMD GPU for desktop builders, that's not true on laptop. They'd be much better off with a 4060/4070. I'm sure there's a very good reason why they went this way, but hopefully we end up seeing Nvidia come to the Framework at some point.
The reason is Nvidia. They rule the use of their GPUs with an iron fist, and don't allow manufacturers to use them outside of the exact form factors they've approved.
It's the same reason why Asus's XG Mobile external GPU cannot use desktop Nvidia GPUs. It's the reason why Framework cannot make an Nvidia GPU module in the foreseeable future. Nvidia is not your friend.
@@poemontyperacer That’s interesting, but I feel the need to point out that AMD and Framework aren’t your friend either, the only reason I’d have preferred Nvidia is because they consistently have better price to performance in the laptop segment.
@@MrHamof no it ain't that, according to linus from ltt, to which i saw today on his live about the F16, nvidia seems quite picky about mass producing with different designs than the usual ones.
I could be wrong about this though, framework just started with AMD, now lets see for NVIDIA slowly but surely perhaps.
“It’s not meant for the general public so you can’t complain about the price!!!” “You’re paying the early adopter price, it will get cheaper when it’s widely adopted!!!”
Paying the amount it costs for a better new laptop just to upgrade the GPU CPU RAM and Motherboard is fucking lame get over yourselves
I would love to see eGPU performance compared to the 13" Intel or equivalent with TB4. Great review as always!
I still think 6 years without upgrading or buying a new laptop is possible for some. But a gaming laptop like this would be more comfortable to use for longer unlike any other!
Module support is the future of repair and technical upgrade.
Very good and thorough review as always! Good job
They do need to work on the fit and finish, and that trackpad is a bit small for the size of the laptop. That said, it's great that you can easily swap parts, and don't have to hunt down things like specific models with, say, the keyboard layout you want.
Still, I'm hoping they eventually come out with a model with Wacom EMR.
8:02 didn’t framework themselves make an ssd expansion bay as a basis for the gpu?
They did, but it's still relying on the iGPU.
I truly hope that the trail that theyre blazing catches on and proves to manufacturers that we want more modular laptops that don't have everything soldered to the board. Sure it's more expensive, but the doctor that you can swap everything means this laptop is a genuine investment in a way literally no other laptop is.
Also, siiiick shirt!!
I would love if they start shipping these to New Zealand, I would rather have this than anything else.
Regarding the upgradeability score: it's so upgradeable that you can have your own customised Theseus' laptop.
I don't get how people are complaining abt the price. Isn't it around 2k including many of the modules, that's waay cheaper than what Apple is ever gonna offer. Their pros with 32gb ram stands around 3k while this only costs 2 or 2.5k ig
It is not competing with Macs. This is a diehard Windows-targeted laptop for people who cannot accept that Windows laptops are getting less modular. For the price of this, there are many cheaper and better options in Windows-land.
@@andyH_England huh? it is competing with Mac. This aint only a windows targeted laptop at all... nothing is preinstalled u can install any OS on it. It can also become a hackintosh. Or is it that suffocating inside the apple bubble? This is targeted at people who believe that once someone buys a product he/she can do anything with it. That's why people want repairability scores of their phones and laptops now. It is defying industry standards of devices engineered to be E wastes. That includes manufacturers who think their products are better when everything is soldered and serialized to the motherboard. Including something as basic as STORAGE.
Hey Jarrod,
Does the display flash black when plugging/unplugging the charger and the display has to switch the refresh rate?
You can change the refresh rate manually via display settings in Windows or in a Linux DE like GNOME or KDE Plasma. It doesn't do so automatically though.
@@cameronbosch1213 I was specifically asking for the automatic behaviour. The manual way, ofc I am aware of it. Besides, my question was whether the display woild go dark for a second or not. Thanks anyway...
Mother of Customization!
Jarrod!, take an ear at "Rise to Fall", totally missed out their new album "The fifth dimension", from June 2023, probably the very best Melodeath band we have in Spain. Enjoy it!
It’s really cool, but what really sucks is that swappable GPUs, which is something that was incredibly common on workstation and GaMiNg laptops not too long ago has become so obscure that a single laptop manufacturer bringing that functionality back is something worth celebrating
The upgradablility is over 9000!
The Framework16 is OVER 9000!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Such a great review! Thanks, mate!🤓
I think it really pays off in the long term, considered that everything works fine all the time. If you really can keep the Laptop for at least 2-3 gpu/cpu generations, by just swapping those parts to newer ones without having troubles on the other parts it should come even cheaper.
That's the thing though, 2 generations at that price point is what you're guaranteed if you just buy a 4060 gaming laptop. You need 3+ generations from a startup company to actually get your monies worth. This is also considering that when you do upgrade you will also likely be paying at around $500-800 every time you upgrade.
imagine the framework 20-> now we can switch displays, and upgrade processors. The old pc build enthusiast will turn into laptop building enthusiasts in the future.
Technically you can upgrade the CPU, I know you may referring to socketed CPU but they can't do anything about that, AMD and Intel don't make them that way anymore, only to be soldered
your on point man thanks for giving so many good reviews for the pc laptop world.
In the wise words of the Prophet Lizzo,
IT'S ABOUT DAMN TIME!
I can't wait for this product to mature, I'm so close to getting one myself for work. I wish that the GPU addon fit the 13-14in model because 17 is too big a laptop for me :( I also really REALLY want a touch screen... with a two-in-one option pretty please ;A;
I will gladly pay extra for this so i dont have to buy a whole new laptop when i want a more powerful one
Been waiting for your review on this enthusiast laptop from Framework. Honestly, I love it and it's quite janky. The only downside is it's price which for a moderate company like them is justifiable. I hope this becomes a success.
Will you still be able to do all those configurations if you're using Linux 🤔
I love the idea but I would like to wait a few generations to see what the actual support will be on providing upgrades to their designs.
They did with the 13 recently. They just added Intel Meteor Lake CPUs, a new display, and a new webcam for all 13 inch models going back to the beginning.
It’d be nice if you could move the keyboard to the front and ditch the touchpad entirely so nothing is covering the cooling vents.
The desirable config is about 2500USD.
At those price range,
1) I'd need some power-limit controls
2) Promise that better GPU module with 16GB Vram will be available by like next 2-3 years (upgradable GPU is what is worth the price for a gaming laptop IMO)
3) some sort of promise for mainboard upgrade in future-- when mobile zen 5 & RX9000 series becomes available
4) perhaps a separate power connector/adapter just to power the GPU module(if GPU module requires more power)
Given that there are barely any All-AMD laptops available, this basically is the choice.
Thing you hope for AMD parts is slightly lower prices compared to intel or nVidia, that argument gets lost here.
Why you need all that VRAM? Unless you're gonna do some AI stuff
@@reiniermoreno1653 @reiniermoreno1653 is it Illegal to do AI stuff ? Or want to have 16Gigs,
It's a lot of money, $2500, I better get something that isn't going obsolete in 2-3 years.
@@harshivpatel6238 the only thing which 16GB would be useful on a laptop would be AI, why you have so much VRAM just to gaming? For 1080p those 8GB will be still fine for a decade
@@reiniermoreno1653 let's see how it goes till 2027 shall we ?
@@harshivpatel6238 save this then
It would be really nice a video comparing laptop cpus, many times you have to choose and just doesn't find the tests
For the price, lack of two M.2 2280, no MXM slot which is a HUGE downer considering how many MXM cards there out there and still being made and released.
No modular CPU even though thats possible using similar replaceable board design as they did with the GPU.
Screens can easily be replaced on any laptop the real pain is finding the right screen and then sourcing it.
For similar price however, HP Zbook offers MXM slots, more storage options, their 17 inch offers up to 3 x M.2 2280 slots, although CPU cannot be replaced, what a bummer.
And frankly, vastly superior build quality, and you can put any HP MXM card in there, its verified, you can stick AMD RX 580 in there, or an RTX 3070, or maybe you fancy Radeon RX 6800M?
MXM is dead. Also, Nvidia didn't want to work with Framework apparently, so AMD literally was Framework's only option.
@@cameronbosch1213
MXM standard is open despite popular beliefs. Companies still make them as they are extremely popular with integrated and server related computers.
Acer and HP still have top end workstation models that have MXM cards in them so its clearly not dead, maybe dead in your world, in the real world millions of these things are made each year, the RTX 3080 exists on MXM, even Intel A750 is on MXM
Good laptop but yeah that price just murders it from being chosen by most people.
Very nice review. That laptop is impressive.
What an innovative device! So much customizability, they clearly had the users need in mind.
On the framework(and any other laptop with wifi 6e) you can upgrade to wifi 7 because wifi 6 and 7 use the same slot, and that means you could upgrade the 2022 legion 7 to wifi 7, and this is great since Lenovo hasn't made a laptop like the 2022 L7 again. It's either too expensive (legion 9, but includes everything the 2022 L7 has) or it doesn't have things like an ethernet port or a 4080/90 option(2024 L7) or it's missing features(Pro7). Let's hope Lenovo can revive the 2022 L7's quality and lower price.
Exactly. Lenovo really made near perfection in 2022 only to abandon it the very next year. Oh how the mighty fell!
This is sick. Yeah its expensive but overtime this technology will be refined and adapted by more brands which will eventually drive prices down.
Why don't we have more laptops with 240w usb-c charging? Seems like a missed chance.
Oh man. Give me a high end NVIDIA graphics option with an OLED screen.
I don't know what to think of Framework. The idea is just up my alley, and I am very used to upgrading my laptop to the degree possible. It just seems that it isn't really there yet. I really hope they pull it up, but just having purchased a high-end gaming laptop, and not living in the Anglo-Saxon world, I just have to pass for now.
I like it and kind of want to support this company, my only worry is will they be around to continue upgrading and how available are replacement parts.
The repair ability is what I like most sbout these laptops
In the future, maybe: "Did you hear about Framework's new module that adds rice cooker functionality?"
Anyone remember Google's Project Ara from 2016? They were trying to release android phones with this same concept of modularity. If it succeeded, it would be great for the customers, but worse for the mobile market monopoly.
I have High Hope on this brand