Review: New Framework Laptop 16 takes a fresh stab at the upgradeable laptop GPU

Review: New Framework Laptop 16 takes a fresh stab at the upgradeable laptop GPU

Curated from Tech – Ars Technica — Here’s what matters right now:

The original Framework Laptop 16 was trying to crack a problem that laptop makers have wrestled with on and off for years: Can you deliver a reasonably powerful, portable workstation and gaming laptop that supports graphics card upgrades just like a desktop PC? Specs at a glance: Framework Laptop 16 (2025) OS Windows 11 25H2 CPU AMD Ryzen AI 7 350 (4 Zen 5 cores, 4 Zen 5c cores) RAM 32GB DDR5-5600 (upgradeable) GPU AMD Radeon 860M (integrated)/Nvidia GeForce RTX 5070 Mobile (dedicated) SSD 1TB Western Digital Black SN770 Battery 85 WHr Display 16-inch 2560×1600 165 Hz matte non-touchscreen Connectivity 6x recessed USB-C ports (2x USB 4, 4x USB 3.2) with customizable “Expansion Card” dongles Weight 4.63 pounds (2.1 kg) without GPU, 5.29 pounds (2.4 kg) with GPU Price as tested Roughly $2,649 for pre-built edition; $2,517 for DIY edition with no OS Even in these days of mostly incremental, not-too-exciting GPU upgrades, the graphics card in a gaming PC or graphics-centric workstation will still feel its age faster than your CPU will. And the chance to upgrade that one component for hundreds of dollars instead of spending thousands replacing the entire machine is an appealing proposition. Upgradeable, swappable GPUs would also make your laptop more flexible—you can pick and choose from various GPUs from multiple vendors based on what you want and need, whether that’s raw performance, power efficiency, Linux support, or CUDA capabilities. Read full article Comments

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Original reporting: Tech – Ars Technica

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