There are dozens of us! DOZENS!
Iām so happy to hear about todayās announcement!
Iām kinda curious if this the 7040 CPUs going in these main-boards will have the AI engines included? From what I read about them itās only some 7040 CPUs that will have those included. Maybe Iām mistaken.
Now the real question then is: Ryzen Pro + ECC memory when? (or maybe Ryzen non-pro + custom firmware with ECC support, e.g. CoreBoot?)
Itāll also be interesting if the Framework 16 can support āDragon Rangeā or, heck, even mainboards with desktop CPU sockets!
Iāve been waiting for this for a while, been wanting a framework, the AMD and matte screen additions finally got me to pull the trigger.
I also did the jump ! YEY !
Canāt wait for it though ahaha
Congrats everyone I just wonder if any AMD models will have dual M.2 / dual NVMe capability.
Slow clap.
Iām going to pre-order as soon as I puzzle out AMDās APU naming scheme.
Ok, Iām slow here. Do the AMD motherboards have non-soldered DDR5 memory sticks? Iāll probably order from the Framework store regardless, but I just wanted to clear on whether these are upgradeable after the fact.
I mean, I figured, but just wanted to be 100% sure. I noticed that theyāre all soldered on Thinkpads, which is probably the closest analogue.
Anyway, I just put in my pre-order. Thank you, Framework!
Sorry for a quite late response! They most definitely should though, I think youāre referring to the 7045 series which are missing the neural engine!
ECC wen?
I just pre-ordered an AMD Ryzen 7 motherboard for my Framework 13. Iām currently running Windows 10 on my 11th-Gen Intel board. Does anyone know if once the new board arrives late this year, if I can pop out my current M.2 drive with Windows 10 and put it in the new Motherboard? Or do I need to do a clean install of Windows in order for it to work on the AMD processor?
I would think that would be a good idea because of potential driver conflicts
Doesnāt hurt to try it. Maybe install the AMD driver package before the switch, just to be safe. But windows can sometimes fail for no good reason when the hardware changes. (Reusing a Linux installation is likely no problemā¦)
Doesnāt windows validation throw a little fit when you do a motherboard swap?
It can, but if you have added your license to your Microsoft account, you should be able to move the license to the new computer/mainboard. At least thatās how it worked for me previously.
When Microsoft introduced Windows to Go, Windows got a lot better at hardware changes. I moved my momās computer from a Core2Quad in BIOS mode to a Dell 9020 running in UEFI, and it worked well enough . That was an installed that went from Windows XP to Windows 7 to Windows 10, so it was quite a chain.