Ah, good to see that since separating from Toshiba that they haven't changed from offering outdated components, in a bulky and heavy chassis, at a stupidly high price for what it is.
A "new" laptop with a CPU (Core i7-10510U) that was released in 2019 (but based on Skylake, which was released in 2015) for CES *2021*, starting from a whopping $900 and on top of that no AMD option? Seriously? Dynabook appear to carry on the Toshiba playbook faithfully...
p.s. Intel have since released Ice Lake *and* Tiger Lake for laptops but Dynabook think it is a good idea to skip them altogether for CES 2021 and stick with good old Comet/Skylake.. Are they targeting noob buyers exclusively?
I suspect they are targeting the change-averse, highly conservative business market. They'd rather use proven hardware that has been out long enough to flush out things like defective silicon that requires a new stepping. Would be interesting to see how these hold up under rough use (do the hinges break on day 366 like clockwork?) and whether the thermal solution can run the processor full speed with zero throttling, all day every day.
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antonkochubey - Thursday, January 14, 2021 - link
Booooring.With those components it could have been released 2 years ago (i5-10520U was released back in 2019, and so was the MX250).
Tams80 - Saturday, January 16, 2021 - link
Makes me wonder why AnandTech even bother covering them. Sponsorship?Tams80 - Saturday, January 16, 2021 - link
Ah, good to see that since separating from Toshiba that they haven't changed from offering outdated components, in a bulky and heavy chassis, at a stupidly high price for what it is.Santoval - Monday, January 18, 2021 - link
A "new" laptop with a CPU (Core i7-10510U) that was released in 2019 (but based on Skylake, which was released in 2015) for CES *2021*, starting from a whopping $900 and on top of that no AMD option? Seriously? Dynabook appear to carry on the Toshiba playbook faithfully...Santoval - Monday, January 18, 2021 - link
p.s. Intel have since released Ice Lake *and* Tiger Lake for laptops but Dynabook think it is a good idea to skip them altogether for CES 2021 and stick with good old Comet/Skylake.. Are they targeting noob buyers exclusively?Pessimism - Wednesday, January 20, 2021 - link
I suspect they are targeting the change-averse, highly conservative business market. They'd rather use proven hardware that has been out long enough to flush out things like defective silicon that requires a new stepping. Would be interesting to see how these hold up under rough use (do the hinges break on day 366 like clockwork?) and whether the thermal solution can run the processor full speed with zero throttling, all day every day.