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Acer Swift X 14", AMD Ryzen 5 5500U, 8GB RAM, 512GB SSD, Nvidia GeForce 1650, FHD IPS $998 + Shipping ($0 C&C) @ Harvey Norman

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If you are looking for a laptop with a dedicated GPU, weighs 1.39kg, has a z-height of 17.9mm and good battery life, this deal maybe for you.

Windows 11 Home
AMD Ryzen™ 5-5500U Processor
14" FHD IPS Panel anti-glare, sRGB 100%, 300 nits
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1650 4GB RAM
8GB & 512GB PCIe NVMe SSD
802.11a/b/g/n+ax wireless LAN & BT
1.39kg, Up to 11 hours battery life
Finger Print Reader Included
HDMI, USB Type-C, USB 3.2
1 Year Pickup & Return Warranty

Ports: HDMI® 2.0, Two USB 3.2 Gen 1, USB Type-CTM port: USB 3.2 Gen 2 (up to 10 Gbps), DisplayPort over USB-C, DC-in jack for AC adapter, 3.5 mm headphone/speaker jack

Chassis material - Aluminum

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closed Comments

  • Anyone know if this Ram is soldered or expandable?

    • +1

      Soldered

      • +2

        Crying Face

    • +2

      I don't know why but even 14 and 15 inch laptops are going for soldered route. Will never buy a laptop with soldered ram.

  • If Size/Weight are not an issue, is Asus Tuf a better option ?
    Comes with 2 years warranty. RAM and Storage are expandable for $949 (4th Gen Ryzen 5)

    • Tuf is a gaming laptop. This is for designers and casual gamers that want portability. TUF has higher refresh rate screen but lower colour gamut and brightness. TUF will be better for gaming because of the size of the chassis, allowing for better cooling.

      • Yeah makes sense. Got one TUF A15 for a mate last night from CentreCom

  • Gold

    Pass

  • Anyone know why nowadays they soldered ram onto laptop? Cheaper costs?

    • They claim to make them thinner and save build costs. But them savings are just not being passed on to consumers who are getting gouged on the prices for higher ram laptops.

      • Its probably so they can charge more for higher memory models

        • +1

          True but they will never admit to that.

  • Considering that RAM is one of those things that DO go bad, it's ridiculous they solder them in to laptops. Tablets, I can almost understand (not really designed to be opened up)— but laptops? I won't believe it costs much more $ to add slots.

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