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
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23 Comments on Acer Readies New Predator Helios 500 Gaming Laptop with Intel Core i9-8950HK Processor

#1
_JP_
"H" means BGA in Intel lingo, which takes the purpose out of having a very bulky but modular and therefore upgradable portable system, last time I checked.
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...
Posted on Reply
#2
Manu_PT
_JP_"H" means BGA in Intel lingo, which takes the purpose out of having a very bulky but modular and therefore upgradable portable system, last time I checked.
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...
I will rather wait for those tasty MSIs with 7550h + gtx 1060 for half the price
Posted on Reply
#3
eidairaman1
The Exiled Airman
_JP_"H" means BGA in Intel lingo, which takes the purpose out of having a very bulky but modular and therefore upgradable portable system, last time I checked.
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...
I miss the Inspiron 9100/Dimension XPS Gen1 laptops, they had plenty of space and cooling...
Posted on Reply
#4
bug
Please tell me these also come with a QHD or 4k screen, so the only chance to reach those 144Hz is to dig up a 3D Minesweeper somewhere.

@_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.
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#5
_JP_
@bug You are not wrong, however until Haswell "M" denoted a socket processor, meanwhile "H" denoted a soldered one. Both within the TDP regions of 35~45W more or less for "Q"s.
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.
Posted on Reply
#6
bug
_JP_@bug You are not wrong, however until Haswell "M" denoted a socket processor, meanwhile "H" denoted a soldered one. Both within the TDP regions of 35~45W more or less for "Q"s.
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.
Fair enough. And they do offer soldered CPUs, but I'm not sure if there's a letter for them.
Posted on Reply
#7
_JP_
IIRC, every mobile CPU Intel makes is soldered, as of now...so every letter? :p
Posted on Reply
#8
bug
_JP_IIRC, every mobile CPU Intel makes is soldered, as of now...so every letter? :p
Oh, all of them? That, I didn't know.
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.
Posted on Reply
#9
cdawall
where the hell are my stars
_JP_IIRC, every mobile CPU Intel makes is soldered, as of now...so every letter? :p
AFAIK this is correct. HK chips just offer an unlocked multiplier for mobile.
Posted on Reply
#10
AnarchoPrimitiv
With a 17.3" screen and a 1070, that display resolution should at least be 1440p, though I'd honestly like to see 4K (and I'm aware of, and do not care about, the fact that the 1070 would not be able to drive a lot of games at native resolution....as I and actually, the majority of PC users use them more often for "non-gaming" tasks)
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#11
lexluthermiester
_JP_IIRC, every mobile CPU Intel makes is soldered, as of now...so every letter? :p
cdawallAFAIK this is correct. HK chips just offer an unlocked multiplier for mobile.
They still have socketed mobile CPU's. They also have a lot more BGA's proportionally than than they used to.

EDIT; I just looked it up, you guys are right. WTH?!? Why the hell did this become a thing?
Posted on Reply
#12
bug
lexluthermiesterThey still have socketed mobile CPU's. They also have a lot more BGA's proportionally than than they used to.

EDIT; I just looked it up, you guys are right. WTH?!? Why the hell did this become a thing?
Thinness, I guess. Plus, considering I've been building systems for like 20 years now and still haven't come across one person that has changed their laptop's CPU, the niche of people taking advantage of socketed laptop CPUs must be really, really small.
Posted on Reply
#13
Vayra86
@Chino I think you missed a "1" or the press release misses one

"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 :)
Posted on Reply
#14
_JP_
lexluthermiesterWhy the hell did this become a thing?
bugThinness, I guess. Plus, considering I've been building systems for like 20 years now and still haven't come across one person that has changed their laptop's CPU, the niche of people taking advantage of socketed laptop CPUs must be really, really small.
A niche, yes. I did make some people happy because of that, allowing them to use their laptop for a while longer, with a simple CPU+RAM...and from around 2010 onwards, SSD upgrade. :) It also reduces wasted hardware. Jumps in Core 2 Duo days weren't that meaningful (double the cache and some 400MHz more per core), but going from i3 to i7...and in some rare cases, a quad-core i7 made an incredible difference.

EDIT: Obviously, my laptops have CPU swaps.
Posted on Reply
#15
TheGuruStud
I love the totally made up CPU model numbers in these laptops.
Posted on Reply
#17
bug
lexluthermiester@_JP_
Screw that, I want to be able to upgrade.
But have you ever swapped the CPU on a laptop? I'm thinking, even with socketed CPUs, a beefier part will probably need better cooling and how do you go around that?
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
Posted on Reply
#18
lexluthermiester
bugBut have you ever swapped the CPU on a laptop? I'm thinking, even with socketed CPUs, a beefier part will probably need better cooling and how do you go around that?
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
Many, many times. Just did an upgrade today on a Dell Inspiron from a Celeron to a Pentium.
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#19
TheGuruStud
lexluthermiesterMany, many times. Just did an upgrade today on a Dell Inspiron from a Celeron to a Pentium.
Sidegrade much? XD
Posted on Reply
#20
lexluthermiester
TheGuruStudSidegrade much? XD
Not really, the Celeron in question is a 1600mhz. The Pentium is 2400mhz. 50% uptick in performance is a bit more than a sidegrade. And for the price it was worth the effort for the user. It was $22 for the Pentium chip. We also upgraded the 2GB of RAM to 8GB and the 320GB HDD to a 750GB Hybrid HDD. For $180 total the upgrade should last them at least the two years before they have to upgrade to Windows 10 at which time they'll likely get a new system. But I digress, we're off topic...
Posted on Reply
#21
TheGuruStud
lexluthermiesterNot really, the Celeron in question is a 1600mhz. The Pentium is 2400mhz. 50% uptick in performance is a bit more than a sidegrade. And for the price it was worth the effort for the user. It was $22 for the Pentium chip. We also upgraded the 2GB of RAM to 8GB and the 320GB HDD to a 750GB Hybrid HDD. For $180 total the upgrade should last them at least the two years before they have to upgrade to Windows 10 at which time they'll likely get a new system. But I digress, we're off topic...
JFC, didn't know they even went lower than 2ghz. What a joke. Should be criminal to sell such a pile.
Posted on Reply
#22
lexluthermiester
TheGuruStudJFC, didn't know they even went lower than 2ghz. What a joke. Should be criminal to sell such a pile.
Oh yeah, the SandyBridge mobiles started 1600mhz.
Posted on Reply
#23
Space Lynx
Astronaut
for that price it should be a gtx 1080... 1070 won't push hardly anything except much older games at 144hz...
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