Thursday, March 29th 2018
Acer Readies New Predator Helios 500 Gaming Laptop with Intel Core i9-8950HK Processor
The Predator Helios 500 is Acer's 17.3-inch gaming laptop featuring one of Intel's upcoming six-core mobile Coffee Lake processors. Consumers can choose between a Core i9-8950HK with a 2.9 GHz base clock and 4.8 GHz boost clock or the lower-spec Core i7-8750H that runs at 2.2 GHz base clock and 4.1 GHz boost clock. Independent of processor model, the Helios 500 comes with a Full HD 144 Hz IPS display with NVIDIA G-Sync support. The onboard NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070 is responsible for graphics duties. The Helios 500's other specifications include 16GB of DDR4-2133 memory and a 256GB M.2 SSD for primary storage. In terms of connectivity options, consumers receive three USB 3.0 ports, two USB Type-C ports with Thunderbolt support, HDMI port, DisplayPort, LAN port, and two audio connectors. The Intel Core i9-8950HK version costs 1999 PLN ($3500) while the Intel Core i7-8750H version goes for 8999 PLN ($2630).
Source:
mobiManiaK
23 Comments on Acer Readies New Predator Helios 500 Gaming Laptop with Intel Core i9-8950HK Processor
Price checks-out with the novelty factor of this configuration, however as it is, 3 years later and it just falls drastically.
I think about that when I see that 3.5K price tag...
@_JP_ H just means high-power which is pretty much required for a gaming platform: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaby_Lake#TDP_classification But don't let that get in the way of a good foaming.
Intel might have changed the meaning, but the method and market position is the same, hence my point. We just stopped seeing "M"s around.
Though I guess I should have seen that one coming, because last time I was looking for a laptop I could barely find a decent one with user replaceable storage and RAM. Ultrabooks (and Apple) be damned.
EDIT; I just looked it up, you guys are right. WTH?!? Why the hell did this become a thing?
"The Intel Core i9-8950HK version costs 1999 PLN ($3500) while the Intel Core i7-8750H version goes for 8999 PLN ($2630)"
Or its just a really weird currency :)
EDIT: Obviously, my laptops have CPU swaps.
Screw that, I want to be able to upgrade.
And no, I'm not saying a soldered CPU is preferable. You can at least swap a socketed one for something similar yourself, in case it goes belly up. Not so with a soldered CPU. I'll never advocate for something that takes choice away from the users. Yes, I know the average user is overwhelmed by choice, but I'm an engineer :D