Unveiled earlier this month, the Aero 15 is the centerpiece in Gigabyte's professional notebook lineup at Computex. The laptop's most noticeable feature is its nearly bezel-free display, which measures 15.6 inches yet fits into a 14-inch chassis.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Gigabyte-shows-off-its-Aero-15-notebook-with-thin-bezel-display.224768.0.html
Probably the best all around laptop. I am wondering if anyone knows about the display specs of the 4k version. Will it be glossy or matte?
If only it had a 1070
We need bigger batteries. Regardless of the 100 watt-hour airline limit.
Driving a high-res display and dozens of PCIe lanes with a quad-core processor + a separate dGPU has its limits.
I don't care how they do it. Maybe put a 100whr internally and add same amount or more as hot-swappable, I really don't know.
But god dammit, just cram in more Li-pol until they come up with something better.
Quote from: dthrp on May 31, 2017, 16:21:13
We need bigger batteries. Regardless of the 100 watt-hour airline limit.
Driving a high-res display and dozens of PCIe lanes with a quad-core processor + a separate dGPU has its limits.
I don't care how they do it. Maybe put a 100whr internally and add same amount or more as hot-swappable, I really don't know.
But god dammit, just cram in more Li-pol until they come up with something better.
The problem with huge batteries is not just the 99WHr Airplane limit, the other main problem is weight.
@Joe:
Indeed it is. These days, some people are willing to sacrifice battery life for a thinner laptop. But then again, the opposite speaks true for so many others.
A well-made 9-cell 100 Whr external battery is pretty compact, only weighing around 0.22 kg. And If they manufacture them using the same nano-tube tech as LG has accomplished with their Gram line of laptops, it potentially could be even lighter. This means that the Aero 15 with a 300 Wh battery (100 internal + 200 external) would come in at 2.6 kg at most. That's the same weight as my Lenovo Thinkpad P51, which I carry around every day with no problem at all. And since I'm a scrawny Asian guy who barely works out, I doubt a few extra grams would be noticeable for average folks.
The current market is perfectly capable of making this a reality, only the laptop ODMs are too apprehensive that the high costs associated won't pay off very well. What a waste of potential. Maybe in the future that will all change with a new electrode or something.