I am very excited about this as I am hoping to replace my i7-2670QM laptop soon. What I hope for is a great package that offers:
1. Less weight (2.8Kg for a 15.6" currently)
2. 4 cores / 8 threads, 32GB support
3. Two (or better three) external display support, each up to 2560 x 1600 at the least.
3. Some sort of faster SSD support, like M.2/PCIe (I am not yet up to speed on these new interfaces) and support for an additional SSD (which may be SATA-3)
4. Underclocking and undervolting support
That last thing is really important to me. I want to be able to have it run cool on 8-threads at low speed unless I explicitly tell it to run full-out (ideally, if certain programs demand a lot but that'll be hard to accomplish).
Funny that I have been comfortable with skipping three generations and feel I miss little performance wise. In raw power, IMHO, differences are simply far smaller then they used to be in the Pentium-I to Pentium-4 era.
1. Less weight (2.8Kg for a 15.6" currently)
2. 4 cores / 8 threads, 32GB support
3. Two (or better three) external display support, each up to 2560 x 1600 at the least.
3. Some sort of faster SSD support, like M.2/PCIe (I am not yet up to speed on these new interfaces) and support for an additional SSD (which may be SATA-3)
4. Underclocking and undervolting support
That last thing is really important to me. I want to be able to have it run cool on 8-threads at low speed unless I explicitly tell it to run full-out (ideally, if certain programs demand a lot but that'll be hard to accomplish).
Funny that I have been comfortable with skipping three generations and feel I miss little performance wise. In raw power, IMHO, differences are simply far smaller then they used to be in the Pentium-I to Pentium-4 era.
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