Razer's 12.5-inch Blade Stealth set out to reimagine thin and eroticism pronoucelight Ultrabooks earlier this year, and it did.
The company's now refreshing the Windows 10 machine with a seventh-generation Intel Core i7 processor and longer battery life.
SEE ALSO: Razer Blade Stealth is a kick-ass alternative to Apple's MacBook ProThe Blade Stealth still starts at $999 in the U.S. and is available immediately from Razer's online store, and on Amazon and Microsoft stores from later this month.
As the smallest and lightest Blade laptop in Razer's lineup, the Blade Stealth is not designed specifically for performance gaming and comes without the $399 Razer Core external graphics accelerator (and graphics cards sold separately), but the new internal upgrades should make it a little more powerful if you want to game at lower settings.
The screen's still the same 12.5-inch touchscreen available in QHD resolution (2,560 x 1,440 pixels) and UHD 4K (3,840 x 2,160 pixels), with 100 percent Adobe RGB color saturation on the latter.
And, of course, the Chroma keyboard still glows in an insane 16.8 million configurable colors.
Here's all the new stuff you get: Seventh-generation Intel Core i7-7500U Dual-Core Processor (2.7GHz/3.5GHz), Intel HD Graphics 620 graphics, 128GB/256GB/512GB PCIe SSD (QHD screen model) or 512GB/1TB PCIe SSD (UHD 4K screen model), up to 16GB of LPDDR3-1866MHz RAM and a larger 53.6 Wh battery that will provide up to 9 hours of battery life (about 15 percent longer than the original Blade Stealth).
For ports, it's still got a Thunderbolt 3 USB-C port, two USB 3.0 ports, HDMI and headphone jack.
Topics Windows
When will the Canada wildfire smoke clear? Not as soon as you'd like.New Hans Christian Andersen? And Other News by Sadie SteinFyodor Khitruk, 1917–2012 by Sadie SteinHappy 2013, From Mark Twain by Sadie SteinWhat is HYBE IM? An interview with CEO Wooyong Chung'The Birdcage's tale of queer love and drag queens is as timely as everA Man Pronounces the Longest Word in the World by Sadie SteinThe newest Google Doodle is, unsurprisingly, about votingUber Eats will let you pick restaurants using less terrible packagingLucky Thirteen by Sadie SteinPleasure Domes with Parking by Aaron GilbreathApocalyptic Reads, and Other News by Sadie SteinGoogle releases plan to protect you from AI threatsWhat is HYBE IM? An interview with CEO Wooyong ChungGoogle releases plan to protect you from AI threatsGracie and Cyril: An Oral History by Emily Greenhouse“Make Time, Not Love” by Jason NovakGoogle releases plan to protect you from AI threatsPapa's Cats, and Other News by Sadie SteinDavid Opdyke by Yevgeniya Traps Apple Watch for 'extreme sports' will have a larger display, report says 'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for October 14, 2023 Poem: Jean Valentine, “Birthday Letter from South Carolina” Elon Musk’s X is under investigation for alleged disinformation about the Israel Lovehoney's sex toy Advent calendars: 24 days of fun, $302 off John Carpenter's maligned 'Prince of Darkness' deserves your attention Prince Tributes Twitter reacts to the pure insanity that was Arizona's Republican primary for governor debate Watch: Christine Schutt Remembers Writing Her First Stories J. R. R. Tolkien, Lord of the Wireless “Be Bold with Bananas” and Other Awful Library Books R. Crumb Is Still Weird (Thank God!) How to watch Colorado vs Stanford football without cable: kickoff time, streaming deals, and more Timbuktu’s Massive Book Heist Watch J. Robert Lennon Discuss His First Novel How a Game of Ping On Arthur Anderson, the Voice of the Lucky Charms Leprechaun Lisa Hanawalt: Hot Dog Taste Test Nude Bookplates: Should They Exist? Richard Fariña’s “Been So Down It Looks Like Up to Me” Turns 50
1.8751s , 10196.2890625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【eroticism pronouce】,Prosperous Times Information Network