Unlike desktops, notebooks are notorious for being disposable. Buying
a notebook usually comes with the expectation you'll toss after a few
years in favor of something newer, complete with a faster processor,
beefier graphics card or more storage. But as this year's crop of gaming
laptops shows, this throw-it-away mentality isn't necessarily the case
anymore.
Just look at MSI, which will replace mobile graphics
cards on its bulkiest gaming laptops after a user has owned the machine
for some time. Meanwhile, Origin has fitted its latest EON15-X and
EON17-X gaming laptops with desktop processors, complete with a socketed
connection for easily swappable components. In the last few months,
we've seen two GPU boxes from Alienware and MSI that allow hardware
tweakers to plug in a desktop graphics card, potentially opening up
their system to years of upgrades. MSI makes it easy for users to replace their SSDs and RAMEasy
upgradability has been a hallmark of desktop computers, but now it's
starting to spill over to gaming laptops. To get a handle on this
modular movement, we talked to the top notebook manufacturers about the
advantages of an upgradable laptop, and take a look at why it hasn't
come to more consumer machines - yet.
Under the hood
The MSI GT80 Titan
is better known as one of the most insane gaming laptops thanks to its
built-in mechanical keyboard, but hardcore PC gamers are equally drawn
to its simple upgradability. Undo two screws and the entire front top
pops off, giving you access to the flash storage, memory, hard drive and
optical drive.
What's more, users can send their laptop back to
MSI for a hot new graphics card. Typically servicing your laptop means
fixing a problem, but for the last few years the Taiwanese computer
maker has offered GPU upgrades for users who want to keep their systems
up to date.
MSI's Clifford Chun told TechRadar that a lot of users
buy new laptops when the next generation of graphics cards comes out.
However, with this upgrade path, users keep using their machines for
longer and stretching their dollars in the process. Need a new graphics card? Just slide it out"That way they're not spending $2,000 for one year, they're actually spending it for three years or longer," Chun said.
Rather
than permanently soldering the graphics card to the laptops logic
board, MSI has employed an MXM card connection that it can easily unplug
and replace.
"It's very easy to just pull out the fan [and] the
thermal modules and the MXM card will just slide out, letting you put in
a new one," Chun said.
Putting the desktop in laptop
MSI
isn't the only company to offer MXM card-based GPU upgrades. Origin
provides the same service and now it's taking the modular concept of
laptops to an even higher level with a desktop processor inside its
latest EON15-X and EON17-X gaming machines. Inside the Origin EON17-XOrigin
Marketing Manager Eddy Piedra said it's exactly the same CPU you would
find in a full-size desktop from the part to the LGA 1150 socket it
plugs into. This in turn means the processor is not soldered to the
motherboard, allowing users to send their laptop back to the
manufacturer for an easy processor replacement.
Piedra explained
that the desktop processor is more beneficial for users who edit video
and use other processor-heavy pro applications. At the same time, the
beefier CPU is useful for games with lots of artificial
intelligence-driven characters such as Elder Scrolls Skyrim and
Civilization V.
There are more advantages than just performance as
Piedra told us: "the [Intel] 4790K processor is half the price of the
extreme mobile processor, so just overall the system is cheaper to begin
with and we have really good overclocking abilities [too]." This is a desktop CPU inside a laptop. Seriously.This
isn't the first time Origin has made a gaming laptop with a desktop
processor humming inside. Three years ago, the boutique computer maker
came out with an EON17-X, based on the Clevo P570WM, rocking an Intel
Sandy Bridge processor.
"On the old unit [it] had a desktop
processor and it was an SLI system, so you used to have dual 300-watt AC
adapter to power it," Tony Berry, Origin's mobile product manager,
said. "These notebooks now with the single GPU and desktop processor use
a 230-watt, really slim AC adapter. It's kind of crazy how things have
changed in just a few years."
Despite running with a desktop
processor again, Origin says it's worked closely with Clevo to develop a
compact system. The new EON17-X is 37% thinner and 30% lighter compared
to the older model. This is thanks to Origin dumping the optical drive
and creating a unified cooling system with one big heat sink for both
the CPU and GPU.