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Edited October 12, 2021
at 01:26 PM
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Decent deal if you're looking for a 17" Lenovo gaming laptop. Coupon Code: LEGION517DB
System Specs
Processor: AMD Ryzen™ 7 5800H Processor (3.20 GHz, up to 4.40 GHz Max Boost, 8 Cores, 16 Threads, 16 MB Cache)
Operating System: Windows 10 Home 64
Graphics: NVIDIA® GeForce® RTX™ 3070 8GB
Memory: 16 GB DDR4 3200MHz (2 x 8 GB)
Storage: 1 TB PCIe SSD
Display: 17.3" FHD (1920 x 1080) IPS, anti-glare with Dolby Vision™, 300 nits, 144Hz
Camera: 720p HD
Keyboard: Backlit - White - US English
WLAN: 802.11AX (2 x 2) & Bluetooth® 5.1
Warranty: 1 Year Legion Ultimate Support
https://www.lenovo.com/us/en/p/la...82jy003uus
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Don't listen to the "last year's chassis" guy. Most laptop makers don't really even "make" their own laptops. Faceless tech companies will sell them the design. In this way it's possible that you get a laptop from one company that is internally similar to a laptop from another. Like if MSI and Lenovo bought their design from Quanta computer, then those laptops may be more closely related than you'd imagine.
What matters to you, the consumer? 1stly, the CPU and GPU chips, along with the RAM and storage. Secondly, (mostly for gamers) you need to consider wattage and cooling. You may think a 3080 beats a 3070, and you wouldn't be wrong to think that way. The issue is that if the 3080 is being underfed by low wattage, it may underperform vs the 3070.
Cooling is an issue too. Heat kills electronics. Laptops are a compromise solution to begin with, due to packing an entire computer's hardware into a compact space. When your laptop heats up, it's programmed to scale back performance in order to reduce thermals. This is good...you don't want your gear to cook. But the downside is you lose performance when this happens.
You can have the two different laptops with the same specs, and due to the thermal solution, they could perform differently. Add in the fact that each laptop has its own wattage rating, and you can have wildly different levels of performance between similarly specced laptops.
Honestly, it's a nightmare for the common consumer. So it's up to us to set the record straight and help people understand. I'll post the details in a different comment since this one is long enough.
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Didn't 5800H came out this year. How can this be last year version? This was announced at CES 2021.
The chassis is from last year
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Should be. I got the 2060 500 nits model for $999 last year...
https://slickdeals.net/f/15219214-lenovo-legion-5-pro-laptop-ryzen-7-5800h-16-qhd-32gb-ddr4-1tb-ssd-rtx-3070-1600-or-less-w-sd-cashback-free-s-h?src=SiteSearc
This Legion 5 has a smaller 15" 1080p with far inferior color gamut, worse cooling, plastic all around vs magnesium on the L5P, lower memory, lower SSD. There are a bunch of drawbacks that can be mitigated by dropping the price to a more reasonable level like $1150.