Quote from: AP on April 12, 2017, 15:42:59
There is a reason for that: Blade is thin and cannot handle the heat. Moreover, there was no 1050 Ti at that point.
Quote from: paulc on April 13, 2017, 16:01:33You are obviously more biased than the reviewer so following is my very last reply to you. You mentioned a lot of laptops already so please go, read, compare, etc those reviews.
If I just want an ultrabook-specced device, there are choices like the Surface Pro ... I really don't think they are comparable.
Quote from: paulc on April 13, 2017, 16:01:33I will just mention that the original complaint was about expandability. It was important for that guy and, apparently, not important for you. This is the second reason why both of you cannot be objective.
DIMM slots & TB3 ports seem irrelevant
Quote from: paulc on April 13, 2017, 16:01:33Once more: the ratings do not include expensiveness of the devices directly to the best of my knowledge. Thus, this is not related to how biased the review is.
Again, I've got nothing against this, but someone may want to get as much performance as he could, after paying all that money.
Quote from: paulc on April 13, 2017, 16:01:33Agree.
5% is a huge difference for these top-end devices.
Quote from: paulc on April 13, 2017, 16:01:33"that improved" is subjective. "+20% off-plug time" is objective. "+5% rating" is objective. You, basically, say that the review is biased because of your feelings. This is not an argument, of course.
Battery is really not that improved, given that the previous model already managed ~7 hrs;
Quote from: paulc on April 13, 2017, 16:01:33I will reply with your own words: "I've got nothing against this". To be more precise, me and a lot of others prefer FHD on small screens because it is cheaper. Whether it is reflected in the score I do not know.
WQHD display
Quote from: paulc on April 13, 2017, 16:01:33Agree but FHD Blade 2016 is miles ahead of Aero in this test yet both receive similar scores. Does this mean that the reviewer is biased towards Aero? I would suspect so.
storage performance
Quote from: paulc on April 13, 2017, 16:01:33GPU - yes but otherwise you give "alternative facts" here: Blade has +7% in PCMark. By the way, this is regardless of a slower storage in synthetic tests.
slightly better CPU&GPU performance
Quote from: paulc on April 13, 2017, 16:01:33So you say review is biased because "you do not know how many people actually use" Thunderbolt? I do not know any single reason to buy WQHD laptops. I do not need an ethernet adapter shipped with Aero at all. I do not need an SD card reader. I do not need this Blade either. Does this mean that the review is biased? No.
But are these things really worth that much of rating difference? More compact chassis, surely rather important; TB3 support, maybe, I don't know how many people actually use eGPU, multiple 4k monitors or high-speed drive arrays, the USB 3.1 port on Aero is already more than sufficient for myself. Apart from those, I really can't see anything of importance. And it just feels not enough, especially when considering the price tag.
Quote from: AP on April 13, 2017, 12:11:02
I did not say that it is an ultrabook; I said that it successfully competes with them in terms of size and battery life. You mentioned best of the best and that already says something: while there is no DIMM slot in the Blade (XPS and Aero do have it), there is a full-featured thunderbolt 3 functionality. So it is more like a trade-off than "not worth buying it". At least, specs-wise.
Quote from: AP on April 13, 2017, 12:11:02
Care about what exactly? The review basically shows that it is absolutely fine with games. The original comment was a complaint about scores in benchmarks. Well, some customers do care about it but it is not a deal breaker if you are choosing between FHD models.
Quote from: AP on April 13, 2017, 12:11:02
I would rather look at frequences under full load. Because the overheating problems with previous models were very obvious under moderate gaming load as well. Since it is not the case here I assume Razer solveded it and keeps temperatures below 80C.
Quote from: AP on April 13, 2017, 12:11:02
I cannot agree with that because the gain of 5% in rating (compared to the previous model) is absolutely justified: this unit works 9 hours unplugged and does not suffer from high temperatures. Compared to Aero, there is a plenty of improvements starting from thunderbolt 3 and ending with dedicated touchpad buttons and dual-channel memory. Compared to Macbook, well, better performance and a full-sized HDMI port.
Quote from: paulc on April 12, 2017, 18:09:17I did not say that it is an ultrabook; I said that it successfully competes with them in terms of size and battery life. You mentioned best of the best and that already says something: while there is no DIMM slot in the Blade (XPS and Aero do have it), there is a full-featured thunderbolt 3 functionality. So it is more like a trade-off than "not worth buying it". At least, specs-wise.
Be careful when you use the term "ultrabook", it has a formal definition by Intel, and I can't see that how is a laptop with GTX1060 and quad core i7 CPU "ultrabook" in any way. Comparable devices like XPS15, Aero14 and Macbook Pro 15 do have certain expandability, excluding the MBP.
Quote from: paulc on April 12, 2017, 18:09:17Care about what exactly? The review basically shows that it is absolutely fine with games. The original comment was a complaint about scores in benchmarks. Well, some customers do care about it but it is not a deal breaker if you are choosing between FHD models.
Reasons behind the problem is not for consumers to care about. The question that should be asked is, is this important for the people who buy the device? I don't know, personally I don't care, as I don't do that much of gaming, but Razer talks about gaming all the time in their product page, so it seems pretty justified to care about this.
Quote from: paulc on April 12, 2017, 18:09:17I would rather look at frequences under full load. Because the overheating problems with previous models were very obvious under moderate gaming load as well. Since it is not the case here I assume Razer solveded it and keeps temperatures below 80C.
Maybe he(or she) means overheat under full stress, not in that game. I do notice that there is a screenshot missing for the frequencies & thermals under full stress, they include it for every other gaming notebook review, even some non-gaming ones. Further information will be appreciated.
Quote from: paulc on April 12, 2017, 18:09:17I cannot agree with that because the gain of 5% in rating (compared to the previous model) is absolutely justified: this unit works 9 hours unplugged and does not suffer from high temperatures. Compared to Aero, there is a plenty of improvements starting from thunderbolt 3 and ending with dedicated touchpad buttons and dual-channel memory. Compared to Macbook, well, better performance and a full-sized HDMI port.
From my point of view, this review does seem, to say the very least, a little bit biased. Maybe that's because the attractive design always makes a good first impression, which explains why Apple desperately struggles to make their product 1mm slimmer...
Quote from: AP on April 12, 2017, 15:42:59
"lack of expandability(worst in class)"
Well, the laptop competes in the class of ultrabooks lasting 9 hrs with minimal to no expandability.
"and high price"
Agree but this does not seem to be included in the rating since, typically, people want to buy the best laptop for the fixed price.
"As I understand all the tests were performed in Full HD resolution."
Nope, it is WQHD in Aero. Why would it be FHD on Ultra?
"This is crap."
Haters gonna hate.
"repaste jobs are done by licensed professionals"
Where may I have a license for that?
"They even put out a BIOS that limits your 1060 by power consumption"
There is a reason for that: Blade is thin and cannot handle the heat. Moreover, there was no 1050 Ti at that point.
"You had no problem showing all the faults of every Clevo"
Even you have problems with pointing out faults because, basically, overheat is your only concern. However, the reviewed Blade (unlike the Skylake model with 84% rating) had no overheat at all:
"The CPU temperature stabilized around 70 °C, die GPU just under 80 °C"