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  • Tade0 10 minutes

    It's been a while since I've last seen a laptop powered by 18650s. The thickness seems to be directly the result of using them there.

  • silon42 1 hours

    As it's not very small, it would be a lot cooler if it had a full no compromise TKL mechanical keyboard.

  • roshin 13 minutes

    the trackball is interesting

  • irusensei 1 hours

    I think 1450 EUR for a 16GB RK3588 is hard to justify. Is the Rockchip open to begin with?

    I'd go for a framework using the Roma or CIX boards if I wanted to go for an "open hardware but not really" goal.

  • jabl 1 hours

    I'm intrigued by this, but waiting for the MNT Reform Next.. https://www.crowdsupply.com/mnt/mnt-reform-next

    vaylian 1 hours

    They also have a small-form-factor stationary computer in the pipeline: https://www.crowdsupply.com/mnt-research/mnt-station

  • boesboes 2 hours

    I've been looking into switching away from apple and try to buy more EU based services and products.

    I love the concept and might just buy one to support the project, but I want something sleeker for my daily use. So I'm considering slimbook & tuxedo atm as buy-from-eu options.

    dlahoda 2 hours

    Where do you want it to be produced? Assembly is not production, essential parts production is.

  • ehnto 2 hours

    Can you fly with stuff like this? I only wonder because of the battery setup. Very cool, I would personally use a regular track pad over the ball as I prefer as little mouse interaction as possible and it would stay out of the way better.

    olgierd 1 hours

    Off the shelf LiFePo4 18650, marked capacity - not at all sketchy. 8 cells are way below the carry-on limit of 100 Wh.

    megasquid 2 hours

    Have multiple times no problems.

  • exitb 1 hours

    It's an interesting concept, but perhaps a bit financially and environmentally wasteful, when you can get a 10 year old ThinkPad for 10% of the price that will perform roughly as well as this one. We don't need to bring more low-powered laptops into this world.

    miladyincontrol 23 minutes

    Agree, being weaker than an N100 I would argue by large it is already ewaste compared to just getting an old thinkpad or similar.

    Its over engineered in some ways and woefully under engineered in others. Any real effort in making it more performant or trying to extend it's life will just generate more additional ewaste than it will save by just reusing existing hardware.

    utopiah 26 minutes

    Maybe https://www.ifixit.com/News/94927/how-open-hardware-empowers... helps to get how it's different than "just" getting older hardware that had good repairability scores (indeed like ThinkPabs,cf https://www.ifixit.com/repairability/laptop-repairability-sc... ) namely that the idea isn't to "hijack" a locked-down supply chain and get cheap parts assembled anywhere. Rather it's to challenge that supply chain and open it up, which is indeed going to be expensive, maybe even environmentally wasteful (to clarify IMHO) at first but then long term will radically improve the situation.

    whateverboat 14 minutes

    How are they better than framework? Looks a worse product for much higher prices.

    timschmidt 39 minutes

    On the other hand, since all the design files are available, anyone can design an upgraded motherboard for this machine and keep all the other parts out of the landfill.

    exitb 18 minutes

    That’s true. It doesn’t even have to be just „anyone” as they sell compute module upgrades themselves. The thing it though, the old ThinkPads are already here, readily available. It’s still more environmentally conscious to get one every few years instead of buying a new compute module.

  • yashasolutions 2 hours

    Looks really cool!