Quote from: Alex544 on May 24, 2020, 00:41:18They sometimes are. This is especially evident for Thinkpads, which often get 2-3 laptop generations out of the same chassis and motherboard layout.
lol
they look sort of similar on the outside so surely the motherboards used today are basically the same motherboards they used years ago!
Quote from: davids on May 24, 2020, 00:33:32Quote from: fdslka;jfdkls;a on May 23, 2020, 20:08:56
For those who are frustrated about the timing and availability of Ryzen 4000 laptops, have a listen to the latest podcast of the full nerd with Frank Azor from AMD. He used to work for Dell and has a lot of insight into how OEM's make design decisions. The long and short of it is that designing a laptop takes about 9-12 months and decisions about the CPU (which dictates the motherboard design, thermal design etc.) are made many months in advance of the final product being released. All of the early Ryzen 4000 laptops are from companies who took a risk and decided to use AMD before the full reveal at CES, before it was confirmed exactly how fast and efficient they would be. Intel has been the safe bet in laptops for over 10 years, but expect to see more AMD laptops later in the year.
So why do the laptops look the same every year if they are in development for a whole year? Seems more like PR more than anything else. These companies just need an excuse for why they are giving the people a bad deal.
Quote from: fdslka;jfdkls;a on May 23, 2020, 20:08:56
For those who are frustrated about the timing and availability of Ryzen 4000 laptops, have a listen to the latest podcast of the full nerd with Frank Azor from AMD. He used to work for Dell and has a lot of insight into how OEM's make design decisions. The long and short of it is that designing a laptop takes about 9-12 months and decisions about the CPU (which dictates the motherboard design, thermal design etc.) are made many months in advance of the final product being released. All of the early Ryzen 4000 laptops are from companies who took a risk and decided to use AMD before the full reveal at CES, before it was confirmed exactly how fast and efficient they would be. Intel has been the safe bet in laptops for over 10 years, but expect to see more AMD laptops later in the year.