this post was submitted on 28 Jan 2024
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Well, this is an example, decent amd processor and graphics card for some gaming, in spain. I know that it's Intel and nvidia, but I spent like 5 minutes tops searching, I'm sure there are better deals. Acer is not a shitty brand, and for 1600€ the framework 16 costs minimum 1600, if we add the same amount of ram and storage it goes ~~up to 1800, without a graphic card~~ I found the place where you add the card. Similar specs, add some usbc ports, audio ports, ethernet, hdmi... 2500€. It's 900€ more expensive. I won't even consider it.
Acer Predator Helios Neo 16 PHN16-71 - Ordenador Portátil Gaming 16" HD 4K - 165 Hz (Intel Core i9-13900HX, 16GB RAM, 1TB SSD, NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4070, Sin SO) Color Negro - Teclado QWERTY Español https://amzn.eu/d/6XMYkh4
The 16 has a bit higher delta indeed, but also it's more difficult to pinpoint its comparables because it's got more significant differences than other workstation or gaming laptops. The modular GPU expansion system is a very significant factor in my book. If you're buying a purely gaming laptop today, the GPU is a self-obsoleting factor. It may or may not run what you want to play 3-4 years down the road. At that point you'd have to spend another €1600 for a new Acer. That's how we've always done things, business as usual. On the other hand a new Framework GPU module might run you another €500 and you don't have to deal with reinstalling, restoring, etc. I'd personally choose the upgrade path every time, if I have the choice. The last laptop I had prior to buying a Framework 13 was a ThinkPad T430s built in 2012. I've upgraded its RAM, storage and replaced its battery and keyboard, till I decommissioned it in 2021.
I don't really understand why is such an amazing thing though, right now they only have 1 option and in 4-5 years I'll probably buy a new one and pass on mine to someone in the family. I guess that if your plan is to maintain it for 10 years it might make sense, but besides storage, I would replace everything in 4 years anyway (and storage specifically can be upgraded in laptops quite easily).
Again, it's cool that they offer the option, its just way too expensive for me for what I would use it.
If you don't plan to keep it beyond 4-5 years, then from purely financial perspective something like the Acer makes more sense.