• jivandabeast@lemmy.browntown.dev
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    1 day ago

    $1k for the base isn’t horrible IMO, especially if you compare it to something like the mac mini starting at $600 and ballooning over $1k to increase to 32GB of “unified memory” and 1tb of storage.

    I get why people are mad about the non-upgradable memory but tbh I think this is the direction the industry is going to go as a whole. They can’t get the memory to be stable and performant while also being removable. It’s a downside of this specific processor and if people want that they should just build a PC

    • Dudewitbow@lemmy.zip
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      1 day ago

      i actually think its not the worst priced framework product ironically. Prebuilt 1k pcs tend to be something like a high end cpu + 4060 desktop anyways, so specs wise, its relatively speaking, reasonable. take for example cyberpower pcs build here, which is of the few oems iirc Gamers Nexus thinks doesn’t charge as much of a SI tax on assembly. it’s acutally not incredibly far off performance wise. I’d argue its the most value Framework product per dollar ironically.

      • Ulrich@feddit.org
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        1 day ago

        Prebuilt 1k pcs tend to be something like a high end cpu + 4060 desktop anyways

        That value proposition evaporates when you factor in repairability and upgradability of those prebuilts.

        • havocpants@lemm.ee
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          11 hours ago

          and if you actually want a PC for gaming on, a discrete gpu (eg: 7900xt) is going to be at least 3x faster at throwing polygons around than the 8060S. This thing is definitely better for AI workloads than gaming.