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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home4/scienrds/scienceandnerds/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Source: https:\/\/www.theverge.com\/2022\/4\/22\/23037156\/framework-mainboard-marketplace-intel<\/a> When the Framework Laptop launched, it had all the potential in the world<\/a> to be both a great laptop and a repairable, upgradeable one. But \u2014 and there\u2019s always a but \u2014 it was only ever going to work if the ecosystem worked. Framework needed to build a market<\/a> around the laptop, so it can be bigger than one company\u2019s feature ideas and release cycles. And more immediately, it needed to prove that it was invested in the idea itself, that Framework wouldn\u2019t just move on to newer and shinier things that break from its upgrade path.<\/p>\n On the larger ecosystem front, Framework\u2019s success is still very much to be determined. But its own intentions don\u2019t seem to have wavered. This week, Framework announced that the Framework Laptop\u2019s mainboard \u2014 which includes storage and memory slots, connectors for four of Framework\u2019s expansion cards and four displays, and three different configurations of Intel\u2019s 11th-generation processors \u2014 is now available separately through the Framework marketplace<\/a>. The cheapest version, which comes with an i5-1135G7 chip, costs $399. The most expensive, with an i7-1185G7 processor, is $799. <\/p>\n Framework also shared all the documentation and 3D-printable designs you\u2019d need to build your own case or device around the mainboard. And you really could build almost anything: if you drop in some storage and power, the Framework Mainboard quickly becomes a functional computer kind of like a souped-up (and much bigger) Raspberry Pi.<\/p>\n
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