Wednesday, December 1st 2021
High-Performance Laptops to Experience a Price Increase Next Year, Razer CEO Confirms
Razer's CEO, Min-Liang Tan, has said in a Tweet that the company's flagship laptop model will receive a price increase due to increased component costs. According to previous reports, the whole supply chain is seeing an increasing amount of pressure in the form of demand and supply's inability to satisfy it. Manufacturing costs have also risen, resulting in more expensive products that consumers end up buying. For a while now, graphics cards have been very hard to obtain, and their selling price is way higher than their launch MSRP target.
According to the Razer CEO, as they reviewed the company lineup of laptops, it appears that their Razer Blade model for 2022 will receive a significant price bump. This is the result of "significant increases in component costs etc.," which means that the end product will absorb those increases. We are left to wonder if all high-performance laptop makers like MSI, ASUS, GIGABYTE, etc., will follow Razer and their decision to increase the price point.
Source:
Min-Liang Tan (Twitter)
According to the Razer CEO, as they reviewed the company lineup of laptops, it appears that their Razer Blade model for 2022 will receive a significant price bump. This is the result of "significant increases in component costs etc.," which means that the end product will absorb those increases. We are left to wonder if all high-performance laptop makers like MSI, ASUS, GIGABYTE, etc., will follow Razer and their decision to increase the price point.
26 Comments on High-Performance Laptops to Experience a Price Increase Next Year, Razer CEO Confirms
Laptops were already a terrible price/perf combo compared to desktops, now in the midst of "shortages" they want to make it even worse. The entire market is in a huge bubble right now, and increases liek this are only going to further worsen the impact when it all comes umbling down.
However, the 2008 recession caused a 180 turn on computer hardware prices for years to come. Right now we've got multiple bubbles, in real estate, in crypto, the stock market, and the jobs market. The question is which will blow up first?
seeing how easy it is for Omicron to infect fully vaccinated vs Delta and older variants, I imagine that tumble will be soon. can't exactly keep asking 68 yr olds to make min wage at a part time job as cashier cause their social security isn't enough to retire on, and also face Omicron. America is broken, always has been, and Covid has been shining a light down its crevices for awhile now, Omicron will be a bigger light.
If you stay on the built-in Vega iGPU for work, I've gotten around 8 hours of battery life (100% to around 15%) just watching YouTube, MPV (H264 and HEVC videos) and VS Code/Slack/Teams.
I say this with a Mantiz Saturn Pro and an early-2020 Razer Blade Stealth 13.
As usual, and just like the last 3 times the media cried wolf (delta, delta plus, mu) Omicron is not going to be spanish flu 2: coof boogaloo. Even the CDC has come out and said that Omicron is no worse then the previous strains, and those were less desly then the original strain was. We'll be fine.
In fact the older i7-9750H that has been modified to go beyond 45W can match a stock desktop 8700 non-K in gaming and light workloads. They are basically the same chips but TDP limited for mobile use.
The bottleneck is not the CPU, but the PCI-E 3.0 4x interface that Thunderbolt 3 and 4 are currently using. That is limited to 40 Gbps without including the return overhead (effectively 32 Gbps or 30 Gbps if USB3 goes through the same lane, not to mention the upstream bandwidth if you don't use an external monitor directly on the eGPU).
Out of the Ryzen 9 models that do have a dGPU majority already includes a powerful dGPU. 85 total out of wich 22 are 3070, 18 are 3080 and 15 are 3060. That's 55 out of 85. The models you mention with low end dGPU's is in the single digits at best accounting for only 1 that has 1650 in it.
Out of the Core i9 models that do have a dGPU 1/3rd already includes a powerful dGPU. 109 total out of wich 24 are 3080, 8 are 3070 and 7 are 3060. That's 39 out of 109. Suprisingly 54 are professional GPU's. The models with low end dGPU's is in the single digits again accounting for only 1 that has 1650 in it.
So on Intel's side it's even more skewed.
Numbers are based on Geizhals.de data. So im not imagining these and i stand by my statement that most laptops with powerful CPU's also already include a powerful dGPU making hooking up an eGPU mostly pointless on lower end CPU models.
I do agree tho that there are other connection related bottlenecks too that further eat away performance in addition to the CPU one.
And unlike eGPU that has it's own enclosure, cooling and PSU the CPU in a laptop is always constrained and TDP limited by the laptop's own design.
I 'm not talking about connecting an e-GPU to existing varieties that already have a dGPU, I want them to replace the dGPU with the e-GPU and increase TDP of the CPU (Intel) so they can take full advantage of PCI-e 4 and the power envelope. Razer Blade laptops are a poor design which thermally constrain the physical elements within, once half the heat source is removed it can only benefit, the e-GPU also give the user the option of swapping graphics cards later if wanted.