Quote from: Mark P on April 10, 2020, 19:03:37Of course, you reminded me that Apple is soon transitioning to "Mac on ARM", by then all thermal issues would certainly be resolved. There's no valid reason for A series chips to throttle more in a laptop than in iPP.Quote from: S.Yu on April 09, 2020, 18:26:37
The cleanliness of Apple's internals impress me time and again, people could copy the exterior, but never the interiors.
But the inclusion of a single fan without a heat pipe to the SoC is simply baffling.
There are a lot of baffling things about the cooling choices of Apple laptops these days, including the long threads about the MacBook Pro 16. I understand when there is a huge range of Windows machines by manufacturers such as Lenovo that it gets difficult to engineer solutions for so many different chassis and combinations of CPU/GPU. But Apple does not have this excuse - the chassis stay the same for years at a time. Thermals should actually improve over time - but they don't.
Is this Intel's fault for not giving OEMs sufficient data in the lead-up to release? Will this no longer be a problem when passively cooled Apple-designed ARM chips take over in the Air? I hope so.
Quote from: Mark P on April 10, 2020, 19:03:37
Is this Intel's fault for not giving OEMs sufficient data in the lead-up to release? Will this no longer be a problem when passively cooled Apple-designed ARM chips take over in the Air? I hope so.
Quote from: S.Yu on April 09, 2020, 18:26:37
The cleanliness of Apple's internals impress me time and again, people could copy the exterior, but never the interiors.
But the inclusion of a single fan without a heat pipe to the SoC is simply baffling.
Quote from: Jeff K on April 09, 2020, 15:35:02
Any idea why the Rocket League FPS results are worse than the 2018 Air?
Quote from: RicoVIking9000 on April 09, 2020, 14:46:31Quote from: Jeff K on April 09, 2020, 14:18:02
Curious about the i3 and how the lower TDP performance is sustained over a long period of time. Because the i5 is so limited by the cooling system, wondering if is it worth the upgrade over the i3?
Quad core, so the system performance will be better, and long term workload will be better, but from other reviews, it seems that even the i3 get stuck at 99C. So yeah hopefully notebookcheck reviews it soon
Quote from: LL on April 09, 2020, 22:57:41The rating is a combination of all our measurements and specs, we don't publish the exact composition as some manufacturers would optimize their laptops to get higher ratings. In the case of the MBAir its rather clear, very good shell, screen, battery runtime, heat and idle noise. Performanc is not that important in our subnotebook category.
Well i guess i'll never understand how Notebookcheck arrives to overall value.
Quote from: LL on April 09, 2020, 22:57:41welcome to the club
Well i guess i'll never understand how Notebookcheck arrives to overall value.
Quote from: RicoVIking9000 on April 09, 2020, 18:45:52it should not be a priority. new models first, free time between them-do whatever yo want.
Then I guess you don't pay attention to Notebookcheck doing this for numerous other laptops from HP, Lenovo, Dell, and so on, along with this article saying "We will try to review the two alternative processors as soon as possible." right under the R15 results
Quote from: Jeff K on April 09, 2020, 15:35:02
Any idea why the Rocket League FPS results are worse than the 2018 Air?
Quote from: william blake on April 09, 2020, 15:39:49Then I guess you don't pay attention to Notebookcheck doing this for numerous other laptops from HP, Lenovo, Dell, and so on, along with this article saying "We will try to review the two alternative processors as soon as possible." right under the R15 resultsQuoteanother cpu, new review? no thank you, too much attention to one laptop model.
Quad core, so the system performance will be better, and long term workload will be better, but from other reviews, it seems that even the i3 get stuck at 99C. So yeah hopefully notebookcheck reviews it soon