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Edited April 29, 2018
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Dell Inspiron 13 7375 2-in1 Laptop: AMD Ryzen 7 2700U, 13.3" 1080p IPS Touchscreen, 12GB DDR4, 256GB SSD, Vega 10, Type-C, Backlit Keyboard, Win 10
$749.99
https://www.bestbuy.com/site/dell...Id=6212813
*Open Box Excellent / Certified
$674.99 - $696.99
Model: I7375-A446GRY-PUS
Dell Inspiron 13 7375 2-in1 Laptop: AMD Ryzen 5 2500U, 13.3" 1080p IPS Touchscreen, 8GB DDR4, 256GB SSD, Vega 8, Type-C, Backlit Keyboard, Win 10
$649.99
https://www.bestbuy.com/site/dell...Id=6208228
*Open Box Excellent / Certified
$584.99 - $603.99
Model: I7375-A439GRY-PUS
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Ftr, $750 is pretty reasonable for these specs.
*This isn't designed to be a gaming device so much as a portable multimedia device. So comparing it to a device with a dedicated GPU kind of makes your point moot.
Even a throttled 2700u at 15w setting (vs 45-50w Intel +mx150) performs just a bit slower than the intel/ mx150. An unthrottled (25w or 35w is possible) Ryzen outperforms the mx150 at less power. So even a laptop build with insufficient cooling (or intentionally lowered power @ 15w) will be on par with the Intel/ mx150, and at a lower price.
In short, it depends on the quality of the thermal disipation & power setting of the Ryzen 2500u/2700u which is set by the mfgr (although a Dell model allowed the user to switch between 15w & 25w config in the bios) . But, no matter the configuration, the Ryzen consumes less power.
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Ryzen for the built in Vega GPU. Graphics fidelity is better + 4c/8t (which you can't go wrong with) all within reasonable pricing.
Ftr, $750 is pretty reasonable for these specs.
*This isn't designed to be a gaming device so much as a portable multimedia device. So comparing it to a device with a dedicated GPU kind of makes your point moot.
Ryzen
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Ftr, $750 is pretty reasonable for these specs.
*This isn't designed to be a gaming device so much as a portable multimedia device. So comparing it to a device with a dedicated GPU kind of makes your point moot.
Benchmarks would beg to differ re gaming. You aren't going to get max game settings at 1080p, but that's not going to happen with any sub $1000 laptop. Both of these are playable in most games at 720p with lowered graphical settings.
Even a throttled 2700u at 15w setting (vs 45-50w Intel +mx150) performs just a bit slower than the intel/ mx150. An unthrottled (25w or 35w is possible) Ryzen outperforms the mx150 at less power. So even a laptop build with insufficient cooling (or intentionally lowered power @ 15w) will be on par with the Intel/ mx150, and at a lower price.
In short, it depends on the quality of the thermal disipation & power setting of the Ryzen 2500u/2700u which is set by the mfgr (although a Dell model allowed the user to switch between 15w & 25w config in the bios) . But, no matter the configuration, the Ryzen consumes less power.