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Samsung gets into the gaming PC game with odious Odyssey laptops
Samsung gets into the gaming PC game with odious Odyssey laptops
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Gaming laptops are one of the things that every PC maker has prioritized at this year’s CES, with big names like Lenovo, and now Samsung, starting whole new sub-brands of gaming PCs. Samsung’s answer to Lenovo’s Legion is the Notebook Odyssey. The Odyssey begins with a 15-inch laptop in February and a 17-inch behemoth in April, both of which look like rejects from Alienware’s design interns. There’s an upsettingly high degree of unoriginality about these laptops, which could easily bear Acer’s Predator or Asus’ Republic of Gamers branding — they’re both cookie-cutter gaudy monstrosities.
Attractive only insofar as they attract the eye
Like Lenovo, Samsung is introducing a red-backlit keyboard on its lower-tier model and a multicolored keyboard on its higher-end laptop. Like a neophyte gaming PC maker, Samsung eschews high-end materials for a massive dollop of hollow plastic: I found flex both in the top lid of the Odyssey 17 and in the keyboard itself. A lot of flex. Samsung’s hinges on both Odyssey laptops are flimsy, nothing approaching the hydraulic motion of, say, Lenovo’s ThinkPads.
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This is the direct opposite of Samsung’s old ‘designed for humans’ slogan
But the most offensive thing about these laptops is how gaudy they are. There’s a ridiculous glossy plastic surround that sits on either side of the touchpad, highlighted by LED lighting. It’s attractive only insofar as it inevitably attracts the eye — but it’s mindless decoration for absolutely no user benefit. The Odyssey 17 also has a “Beast Mode” button above the keyboard — which Samsung at least promises to rename before releasing the laptop — and that flips the switch to turn on max performance mode in the included Odyssey Control software suite.
I spent a good amount of time asking Samsung’s CES reps why anyone should want to buy the company’s gaming laptops over other, more established and experienced brands. If Samsung had a different look, if it had used some of its higher-end materials or displays, I’d understand its differentiation — but Samsung is seemingly deliberate in aiming to be exactly like everyone else. Except it’s failing even at that, because leaders like Alienware and Asus have advanced to using more metal in their construction and better screens and keyboards. Samsung’s answer was that it’s “the most vertically integrated PC maker in the market” — which is utterly immaterial to a PC buyer that just wants to buy the best possible computer.
The displays should be a Samsung strength, but they’re not
The Odyssey laptops’ matte displays were also a letdown, exhibiting so-so viewing angles and a muted color palette. The 17-incher has 300 nits of brightness and the 15.6-inch model has 280 nits. Their resolution? 1080p on both. Samsung is evidently shooting to hit an appealing price point with the Odyssey, which will start at $1,199 for the smaller laptop, equipped with an Nvidia GeForce GTX 1050. Dell has an Inspiron laptop with the same GPU for $799.
There are some positive aspects to Samsung’s Odyssey computers. A perforated panel at the bottom — HexaFlow Vent, in Samsung parlance — helps airflow around the innards of each machine and is unlockable with just three screws. Then you can mess around with upgrading the RAM or adding a bigger and better NVMe SSD. Being made almost entirely out of plastic, these laptops are also reasonably light for their size. The 17-inch laptop weighs 3.79kg / 8.4lb and the 15-inch is 2.53kg / 5.6lb. And, yes, they’re somewhat affordable for the high specs they promise, which include lots of memory, SSD storage, and quad-core Intel Kaby Lake processors. The Notebook Odyssey 17 also has a USB-C / Thunderbolt 3 port.
It’s just that gaming doesn’t have to be this gaudy, and Samsung’s entry into this category could have been an opportunity to do something different, something better. PC vendors are misreading the causal relationship between LED-laden gear and gamer purchases: many gamers buy obnoxious-looking PCs because that’s the only high-spec option on the market.
Photography by Vlad Savov
▲2024MWC聚焦在AI、5G、物聯網、創新科技、工業4.0等主題。(圖/取自pixabay)
記者張家瑋/綜合報導
世界行動通訊大會MWC 2024近期剛剛落幕,本次展出重點聚焦在AI、5G、物聯網、創新科技、工業4.0等主題。Podcast節目《娜你知道嗎》主持人莫娜,在本集節目中就來分享在會展上特別受到矚目的產品。
▲點擊收聽Podcast《娜你知道嗎》,分享2024世界行動通訊大會。
首先,Lenovo展出一款全新ThinkBook。它採用了17.3吋的Micro LED顯示器,打造了無邊框螢幕,可以選擇半透明或是不透明顯示,即使是透明顯示,仍可以看影片或進行其他筆記型電腦的操作。它也沒有實體鍵盤,而是採用虛擬鍵盤,實際上會是一塊觸控板,AI會根據手部動作偵測,判斷鍵盤的位置。此外,這款透明
公司收購筆電還配備了一個鏡頭用於分析物品,非常適合應用於生物學實驗室。儘管,透明ThinkBook非常吸引眼晴,但Lenovo官方表示,這款
公司收購筆電只是一款實驗性的產品,未來不會量產。
接著,Motorola展示了一款可以彎曲的智慧手機,採用6.9吋的pOLED顯示幕,具備Full HD OLED。不僅可以彎曲成各種角度戴在手腕上,也能夠獨立站立在桌面上,更像是手錶與手機的結合體
▲莫娜分享了2024 MWC印象最深刻的產品。(圖/翻攝自娜你知道嗎)
此外,會展上還有兩台車特別引人注目。第一台是小米所推出的電動車SU7,MWC是它的第一次正式亮相。這款藍綠色的SU7電動車,具備五大全新技術,包括小米超級馬達、小米自家的CTB電池技術、自動駕駛技術、最長800km續航、0-100km/h只需2.78秒等等。目前SU7已確定會量產。
另一台受則是來自美國新創公司的Alef飛行原型車。它可以像普通汽車一樣在地面上行駛,也可以像直升機一樣在空中升起飛行。外觀上非常像一個飛碟,為了減輕重量,車身上設有風扇,表面設有孔洞。目前Alef已製造兩台原型車,車輛擁有8個引擎,採用電力推進。雖然,這樣的飛行車對於解決交通擁堵問題會非常方便,但距離空中交通法規的實現,還有一大段距離。
莫娜最後總結,雖然這次手機產品的亮點不多,但也展出了許多令人驚豔的創新產品,展示了科技的未來趨勢,與讓人期待的未來發展。
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