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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\/23125965\/framework-laptop-upgrade-intel-12th-gen<\/a> A little more than a year after announcing the first version<\/a> of its ultra-repairable, upgradeable notebook, Framework<\/a> is launching the second-generation Framework Laptop. It\u2019s meant to be substantially faster and a little more sturdy, but, mostly, it\u2019s a signal that Framework is serious about building truly long-lasting devices and might actually be fulfilling the often promised and rarely delivered dream of upgradeable, modular gadgets.<\/p>\n The new laptop\u2019s headline spec is the processor: it comes with a 12th Gen Intel Core i5 or i7 chip with the top-of-the-line, $2,049 model running the Core i7-1280P. (That\u2019s a full generation jump from the current model, and these new Alder Lake chips<\/a> promise big performance improvements and a boost in efficiency.) The base model, which runs a Core i5-1240P, starts at $1,049 fully assembled. All are available for preorder now and start shipping in July, though you shouldn\u2019t expect one too quickly: Framework is using a preorder system to manage demand and seems to anticipate shipments taking a while.<\/p>\n In addition to the performance jump, Framework also rebuilt the laptop\u2019s top cover, which it says is now much more rigid than before. That\u2019s a welcome change: when The Verge\u2019s <\/em>Monica Chin reviewed the first model<\/a>, the laptop\u2019s unavoidable flimsiness was one of the device\u2019s worst qualities. Beyond that, Framework also said it has \u201ccarefully optimized battery life,\u201d which was only average on the last model.<\/p>\n Most of the other specs haven\u2019t changed: the new laptop still has a 13.5-inch screen, weighs a shade under three pounds, and has the same decent keyboard and trackpad. In general, the new Framework Laptop sounds like a nice, if fairly predictable, improvement on what you can buy already. It\u2019s worth noting, though, that even the existing model is already a meaningful upgrade over what the company launched last year: Framework has added Wi-Fi 6E support since launch and offers a handful of new dongles for its expansion ports. That\u2019s Framework\u2019s whole thing, really; the laptop isn\u2019t a static device \u2014 it\u2019s an ever-changing one.<\/p>\n
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