Sunday, 30 September 2012

Razer Edge review (late 2012)

Second-generation Razer Blade review

Razer makes a routine of catching us unawares -- smashing the mold being an accessory manufacturer because they build laptops, prototype game handhelds and controller-carrying pills. Their Edge laptop cut through our anticipation too, having a beautiful aluminum spend and among the slimest profiles associated with a gaming rig available on the market. It had some serious defects, though: it had been underpowered, had minor build issues and just fell short within the audio department. Its maker, apparently, wasn't discouraged: mere several weeks following the original Blade's own debut, Razer has become presenting a successor.

The majority of the changes are internal: this model swaps the original's Sandy Bridge CPU and last-generation NVIDIA graphics for any recently introduced 2.2GHz Apple Core i7-3632QM processor along with a Kepler-based GeForce GTX 660M GPU. It caught our interest -- Razer had formerly was adamant its first laptop wasn't built only for energy, however for reasonably limited experience. Now, the firm appears to become concentrating on both (now that's reasonably limited experience we are able to fall behind). So, is that this upgrade enough to compensate for the OG version's weak points Read onto discover.

Gallery: Razer Edge review (late 2012)

Continue reading through Razer Edge review (late 2012)

Filed under: Gaming, Laptops

Razer Edge review (late 2012) initially made an appearance on Engadget on Sun, 30 Sep 2012 03:01:00 EDT. Please visit our terms to be used of feeds.

Permalink         Email this   Comments

photo voltaic energy system

No comments:

Post a Comment