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      Amazon brade le prix cet excellent ordi portable HP, c’est le moment de vous faire plaisir

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Wednesday, 17 April - 17:08

    Laptop Hp 17 Pouces

    Profitez dès maintenant d'une belle remise de -18% sur le laptop HP de 17 pouces avec cette offre Amazon à durée limitée.
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      First ThinkPad

      Sachin · Tuesday, 6 February - 11:14 edit · 10 visibility

    https://upload.movim.eu/files/0a11b6a0afd54b3c4db37456f9c475750f224307/0IMQxkJYBfZx/1000014916.jpg

    Always wanted to have first laptop with my own money to be IBM ThinkPad, but as matter of fact they sold it to Lenovo . So have to be Lenovo ThinkPad. It came late but was worth the quality you can ask for. Running all weather fedora. #fedora #laptop

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      Craquez pour ce PC portable Gaming double écran à prix sacrifié !

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Wednesday, 20 December - 14:45

    N One Nbook Fly Laptop

    Craquez dès maintenant pour le Laptop Gaming N One NBook Fly grâce à cette offre folle sur le site Geekbuying.

    Craquez pour ce PC portable Gaming double écran à prix sacrifié !

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      Voici les meilleurs ordinateurs portables pour étudiants en 2023

      news.movim.eu / JournalDuGeek · Thursday, 28 September, 2023 - 09:00

    laptops-158x105.jpg

    Lorsque l'on est étudiante ou étudiant, il est courant d'avoir besoin d'un ordinateur portable. Mais selon les études et les moyens, le choix ne sera évidemment pas le même. Plusieurs éléments sont à prendre en compte : la durabilité, le prix, la puissance et la polyvalence, l'autonomie, le système d'exploitation, etc. Pour vous aider dans votre démarche, nous avons sélectionné pour vous plusieurs des meilleurs laptops pour étudiants.

    Voici les meilleurs ordinateurs portables pour étudiants en 2023

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      Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11 review: Two steps forward, one step back

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 28 June, 2023 - 14:22 · 1 minute

    Lenovo's ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11, which not-confusingly-at-all feature 13th-generation Intel Core processors.

    Enlarge / Lenovo's ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11, which not-confusingly-at-all feature 13th-generation Intel Core processors. (credit: Andrew Cunningham)

    Specs at a glance: Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen 11 (As reviewed)
    Display 14.0-inch 1920×1200 touchscreen (162 PPI)
    OS Windows 11 Pro
    CPU Intel Core i7-1355U (2 P-cores, 8 E-cores)
    RAM 16GB LPDDR5 5200 MHz (soldered)
    GPU Intel Iris Xe (integrated)
    Storage 512TB NVMe SSD
    Networking Wi-Fi 6E (802.11ax), Bluetooth 5.3
    Battery 57 Wh
    Ports Two Thunderbolt 4, two 5Gbps USB-A, HDMI 2.0b, headphones
    Size 8.76×12.43×0.6 inches (222.5×315.6×15.36 mm)
    Weight 2.48 lbs (1.12 kg)
    Warranty 1-year
    Price as reviewed $1,733

    Lenovo's ThinkPad X1 Carbon has long been one of our favorite ultrabook designs, combining a generous array of ports, a nice keyboard and trackpad, and a larger-than-typical 14-inch screen into a thin-and-light package.

    Last year's Gen 10 iteration had a major flaw, though—a big step down in battery life, at least partially attributable to a more power-hungry 12th-generation Intel processor. (Yes, before we get any further, Lenovo's ThinkPad generational designations don't align with Intel's processor designation, so a Gen 10 ThinkPad uses a 12th-gen Intel CPU, and the Gen 11 ThinkPad uses a 13th-gen CPU.)

    This year's Gen 11 X1 Carbon refresh mainly has one job: retain all the good stuff about last year's refresh and the X1 Carbon lineup generally but get the battery life closer to where it was before. The Gen 11 partially does that job. That means the performance gains from last year are negligible (and sometimes even a small step backward). It's an acceptable sacrifice for improved battery life, and the X1 Carbon is still one of the best all-around portable laptops you can buy. It's just that the Gen 11 model still can't quite manage to feel like an across-the-board upgrade from the Gen 9 X1 Carbon from two years ago.

    Read 22 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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      15-inch MacBook Air hands-on: Just what some folks were asking for

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 7 June, 2023 - 02:07

    CUPERTINO, Calif.—People have been asking for a 15-inch MacBook Air for about as long as the Air has existed.

    The Air was originally conceived as a laptop that was all about extreme portability. But over time it became the default MacBook for most people—and plenty of users don’t need the performance of a MacBook Pro but might like a little more desktop space or a bigger screen on which to watch streaming TV.

    Apple has targeted those people here. I spent a few minutes handling and using the 15-inch MacBook Air and—surprise! It’s just like the most recent 13-inch Air but wider and taller.

    Read 8 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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      2023 MacBook Pro review: A refined second generation

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 23 January, 2023 - 14:38

    One of the interesting side effects of Apple's move toward using its own silicon in the Mac is that the Mac update cycle now looks a lot more like the iPhone's: mostly predictable, regular updates that offer modest generation-to-generation boosts to performance and maybe a few additional refinements or new features.

    That's very much the case with the 2023 MacBook Pro. For most intents and purposes, it is the 2021 MacBook Pro. The only difference is the inclusion of the new M2 Pro and M2 Max chips for boosted CPU, graphics, and machine learning performance over 2021's M1 Pro and M2 Max, plus some connectivity upgrades that directly address some of our very minor quibbles with the otherwise excellent 2021 models.

    That said, the 2021 MacBook Pro was far from a disappointment when it launched, and the market hasn't changed enough in the past two years to make the mostly similar 2023 models any less attractive. These are still the best laptops you can buy for many use cases—provided you don't mind spending a small fortune, that is.

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      First M2 Max benchmark scores appear to leak on Geekbench

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Wednesday, 30 November, 2022 - 23:26

    The front of a closed, silver-colored laptop on a table

    Enlarge / The 2021 16-inch MacBook Pro. (credit: Samuel Axon)

    It looks like the first benchmarks of Apple's upcoming M2 Max chip have leaked in Geekbench's database.

    When users run the over-the-shelf version of the Geekbench 5 benchmarking tool, the scores are logged to a public database of results and are tied to entries for specific hardware. In this case, the result (which was discovered by a Twitter user ) is listed under a product labeled "Mac14,6" running the as-yet-unreleased operating system "macOS 13.2 (Build 22D21)." The entry also noted that the chip had 12 cores.

    The chip in question is likely destined for MacBook Pro and Mac Studio models that will launch sometime next year. As for the results: The overall single-core score is 1,853, and the multicore score is 13,855. The more granular scores like crypto, integer, and floating point generally track along the same lines when compared to this chip's predecessor, the M1 Max.

    Read 4 remaining paragraphs | Comments