Modern iron in a very old chassis. Savings on design are maximum - due to this, the low price. On paper, the characteristics are fire, but the user experience is so-so. It was better to take HP Omen on ryzen. Has some pros 8 cores, 11th gen intel - lots of power. The discrete video card is not weak. RAM 2 slots, nothing soldered. IPS screen 144 Hz. The keyboard is not mutilated: there is a separate power button, there is no accounting block on the right side, it is very convenient to work blindly with the keyboard. Affordable price. The bundled SSD is pretty good. Has some cons Very weak battery. At the slightest load, it holds no more than two hours. Separate holes for a microphone and headphones are enchanting nonsense, because. if you have wired ears with a microphone, your microphone will not work. And the disadvantage of the built-in microphone is that it picks up the noise of the cooling system. The cooling system can hardly cope with a hot processor. At the slightest load, the noise is already very well audible. A weak wifi antenna, where the iPhone shows 300 Mbps, this miracle from the same network catches 40-50 Mbps. If the access point is nearby, then yes, everything is fine. Dismantling in order to add RAM is very confusing. The slot for installing a SATA drive is just an atavism, a banal saving on chassis design. Instead, a more capacious battery would fit, but no.
Processor AMD Ryzen 7 PRO 4750G AM4, 8 x 3600 MHz, OEM
11 Review
27" Apple iMac All-in-One (Retina 5K, Mid 2020) MXWT2RU/A, 5120x2880, Intel Core i5 3.1GHz, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD, AMD Radeon Pro 5300, MacOS, Silver
13 Review
HP Pavilion Gaming Desktop Computer, Ryzen 5 3500 Processor, NVIDIA GTX 1650 4 GB, 8 GB RAM, 512 GB SSD, Windows 10 Home (TG01-0030, Black)
11 Review
14" ASUS Vivobook Pro 14X OLED N7400PC-KM059 2880x1800, Intel Core i5 11300H 3.1GHz, RAM 16GB, DDR4, SSD 512GB, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3050, no OS, 90NB0U44-M01450, silver
25 Review