Firstly, it is immediately clear that some of the data on the screen is fake, for example dE data before and after calibration.
Secondly, the PWM frequency of 960Hz is questionable. At this frequency, burnout accelerates.
Thirdly, and this is key, the screen panel 100% does not correspond to the
True Black HDR 500 sign, because it requires a maximum black level of
0.0005 nits (
displayhdr.org/#tab-true-black-500) and, accordingly, a
native contrast of at least 1M:1, taking into account the division of the screen brightness of a minimum of 500 nits by the maximum black level of 0.0005 nits.
According to the review, the screen has 50 times worse contrast.
Congratulations to the buyers - they have already been deceived for a lot of money. They won't have real HDR10 support like top TVs, despite the AMOLED panel. At the same time, support for HDR10+ (Dynamic HDR) is also not announced at the hardware level. However, we still need to look for movies and games with HDR10+ support.
About the processor. At the beginning of the review there is fake data PL1=60W, but the author, as follows from the article, conducts a performance test in Cinebench R15 with real PL1=126-135W, otherwise the 14900HX on 10nm cores is simply not capable of such long-term sustained performance. At 60W, only the 7945HX is capable of this level of performance. Because it is almost 2 times more energy efficient. Obviously, in new games, it will significantly lose to the 7945HX with a significant load on the cores, because...will be forced to drop to the specified PL1=60W, while simultaneously consuming 4090 175W. After all, the case is shamefully light and the cooling system simply cannot cope with cooling 300W+. Even if it was a 3kg/18" device.
RAM, however, is optimized quite well for DDR5 5600.
For the mobile 4090 (which is about 1.5 times weaker than the desktop one), everything has been clear for a long time - it will not be able to handle the new 2024 game's releases 100% at stable 60fps+ in the native screen resolution - 2.5k, especially at ultra quality (as intended by the artist-designers in the studio).
All that remains is to use DLSS(crunch for quality) or look at the cloudy picture in fhd, because 2.5k not compatible (by integer divide) with 4k/fhd resolutions.
The noise is obviously increased, but what is surprising here with such a hot filling of Intel+NVidia cheaters + lightweight case?
QuoteHere, for example, the significantly cheaper Dell G16 remained much quieter, not changing its output volume of 27 dB over the entire test run.
For a simple reason, the cheaper Dell G16 does not consume as much and weighs 300g more..
It's no longer worth mentioning the poor, abbreviated, non-classic keyboard with a numpad for 16" and the not very good arrangement of ports.
As a result, the author draws the right conclusion - it's not worth buying.