Quote from: JUAN_pcbox on December 11, 2024, 10:44:364 M.2 slots and 256GB CAMM2 RAM. for laptops they shouldn't be LPCAMM2 because CAMM2 is for PC something doesn't fit me.
The features are good but the price $ 4,000 is not going to buy that for anyone.
And the RTX 5000 graphics but which of all of them an RTX 5050, 5060, 5070, 5080, 5090
They say RTX 5000 based on Ada, that is, based on the RTX 4000 series, so why do they say RTX 5000 there are many gaps that need to be clarified.
Most gaming/high performance laptops use regular DDR4/DDR5 Ram, albeit a smaller SODIMM form factor rather than the longer ones for desktops. Most gaming/workstation laptops coming in 2025 will still have DDR5 Sodimms.
LPCAMM2 was introduced for laptops, it uses Low power DDR5 or LPDDR5 Memory and comes in 16GB, 32GB and maxes out at 64GB for now. LPCAMM2 has 4 modules so theoretically speaking if they used the same high density 32GB modules found in the M4 Max, they could create a 128GB model.
CAMM2 RAM on the other hand goes up to 256GB which is awesome since many laptops and arrow lake HX already support up to 192GB and we might get custom CPU versions that support 256GB.
CAMM2 is awesome because for a laptop to have 192GB or more, it needs 4 RAM Slots since DDR5 SODDIMMS max out at 48GB per module. The laptop either needs to be thicker to stack two sticks on top of the other two....or waste a lot of space to keep them flat. CAMM2 allows for 192GB on sub 20mm laptops.
As for the GPU, we just have to wait and see. It doesn't really matter whether it's Ada or Blackwell. There won't be much difference between them.
I for one I'm glad to see an 18" portable workstation that has a 200W combined power limit. Basically 70W CPU + 130W GPU....or....95W CPU + 105W GPU for the 18 Inch.
Or 170W total for the 16 Inch, basically 65W CPU + 105W GPU......or.....80W CPU + 90W GPU.