JennyDarukat

joined 1 year ago
[–] JennyDarukat@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

I plan to use mine as my only computer once the growing pains/BSODs I've been having are figured out. Another nice benefit will be that it's insanely efficient by comparison, drawing less under full load than your old CPU alone and far, far less under idle/light use conditions.

You can always add in an eGPU dock down the line if you want some more graphics power, too (though keep in mind that's more viable for a current gen midrange card since the data bandwidth becomes more of a bottleneck toward high end cards). A nice benefit of that will be that you can dock up with only a single cable for graphics, power and peripherals, too, and so far with my GPD G1 (also AMD based), I've found I can just hotplug it without any issues which is super convenient - it may be a bit more convoluted if you're running an Nvidia based card in your enclosure, but I can't say for sure.

[–] JennyDarukat@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

Honestly your best bet is going for a well regarded standalone headphone and combine it with something like the Antlion Modmic. Add some cable ties (preferably the twisty ones, or velcro) so you're only dealing with one wire effectively and you get the headset form factor with the flexibility of two separate devices.

[–] JennyDarukat@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

Also a very good headphone, very nice!

[–] JennyDarukat@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago (5 children)

The beginning of personal audio: Sennheiser HD 414
Timeless: Sennheiser HD 600
Luxury: Sony R10 / Sennheiser Orpheus
Studio: Beyerdynamic DT 770
Monitoring: Sony MDR-V6/7506
Innovation: Stax Lambda series
The modern benchmark: Sennheiser HD 800

[–] JennyDarukat@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

The AMD variant is still very unstable. I've seen more than a few people speak about repeated bluescreening, in my own case with no discernable cause (no dump files being generated).

When it works, it's seriously amazing between the performance, battery life and noiseless operation under day to day use. But it is a first gen product. On the chassis and handling side, I'm extremely happy, though I would have preferred a 14" 16:10 display but that one is a preference thing - the 3:2 is still very nice, if with a pretty high latency.

I hope they manage to figure it out and make the platform stable sooner rather than later because I want this to be my only computer, and the only thing stopping it is the growth issues. Wouldn't have minded if they'd kept it in the oven a while longer to figure it out tbh.

[–] JennyDarukat@alien.top 2 points 11 months ago

I do wish the screen was 16:10, if just for the fact that there are more panels available in that form factor for Framework to choose from (especially touch or high refresh rates, creative-tailored displays etc).

3:2, I've only seen on the Surface Laptop elsewhere on the market and I don't expect Framework will soon command the volumes to get bespoke panels made for themselves. The same goes for other accessories like bags and privacy screen filters.

[–] JennyDarukat@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago

Are you using a Logitech wireless dongle? I had similar freezing into crashing scenarios until taking out my lightspeed adapter and running Windows/optional software updates, and since then it's been smooth.

[–] JennyDarukat@alien.top 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The processors aren't the big hurdle, the ecosystem is. There's just too much legacy of x86 for things to suddenly make a switch because the Linux & Windows scenes aren't under an iron grip like MacOS is by Apple, so a unified and industry wide push will never happen - it's inherently a trickle adoption, if at all.