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      Framework’s cheaper, colorful Laptop 12 up for preorder, starts at $549 bare-bones

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 10 April 2025 • 1 minute

    Framework is opening US preorders for its new Laptop 12 today, a couple of months after announcing the system at an event in February. Framework's DIY edition of the laptop, which is missing RAM, an SSD, a USB-C charger, and an OS and requires some assembly, will start at $549. A fully assembled pre-built version with 8GB of RAM, a 500GB SSD, a 60 W charger, and Windows 11 Home starts at $799.

    All preorders placed on Framework's site require a $100 deposit, and almost all configurations begin shipping in July. A first batch of systems is slated to ship in June, but this requires a $250 donation to Hack Club ; Framework says the donation will be used to buy Framework 12 laptops for high school students.

    The Laptop 12 was built to be a more budget-friendly system, which is reflected in its specs, screen size, and its mostly plastic construction. But like the Laptop 13, the Laptop 12 prioritizes upgradeability and repairability and retains the USB-C-based Expansion Card system that was the Laptop 13's biggest innovation when it was introduced. Each Laptop 12 has four Expansion Card bays plus a headphone jack, allowing the installation of USB-C, USB-A, DisplayPort, and HDMI ports, as well as the other Expansion Cards Framework offers.

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Framework’s cheaper, colorful Laptop 12 up for preorder, starts at $549 bare-bones

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 10 April 2025 • 1 minute

    Framework is opening US preorders for its new Laptop 12 today, a couple of months after announcing the system at an event in February. Framework's DIY edition of the laptop, which is missing RAM, an SSD, a USB-C charger, and an OS and requires some assembly, will start at $549. A fully assembled pre-built version with 8GB of RAM, a 500GB SSD, a 60 W charger, and Windows 11 Home starts at $799.

    All preorders placed on Framework's site require a $100 deposit, and almost all configurations begin shipping in July. A first batch of systems is slated to ship in June, but this requires a $250 donation to Hack Club ; Framework says the donation will be used to buy Framework 12 laptops for high school students.

    The Laptop 12 was built to be a more budget-friendly system, which is reflected in its specs, screen size, and its mostly plastic construction. But like the Laptop 13, the Laptop 12 prioritizes upgradeability and repairability and retains the USB-C-based Expansion Card system that was the Laptop 13's biggest innovation when it was introduced. Each Laptop 12 has four Expansion Card bays plus a headphone jack, allowing the installation of USB-C, USB-A, DisplayPort, and HDMI ports, as well as the other Expansion Cards Framework offers.

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    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tagframework tagframework tagframework tagframework laptop tagframework laptop tagframework laptop tagframework laptop 12 tagframework laptop 12 tagframework laptop 12 tagtech tagtech tagtech tagframework tagframework tagframework tagframework laptop tagframework laptop tagframework laptop tagframework laptop 12 tagframework laptop 12 tagframework laptop 12 tagtech tagtech tagtech tagframework tagframework tagframework tagframework laptop tagframework laptop tagframework laptop tagframework laptop 12 tagframework laptop 12 tagframework laptop 12

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Framework’s cheaper, colorful Laptop 12 up for preorder, starts at $549 bare-bones

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 10 April 2025 • 1 minute

    Framework is opening US preorders for its new Laptop 12 today, a couple of months after announcing the system at an event in February. Framework's DIY edition of the laptop, which is missing RAM, an SSD, a USB-C charger, and an OS and requires some assembly, will start at $549. A fully assembled pre-built version with 8GB of RAM, a 500GB SSD, a 60 W charger, and Windows 11 Home starts at $799.

    All preorders placed on Framework's site require a $100 deposit, and almost all configurations begin shipping in July. A first batch of systems is slated to ship in June, but this requires a $250 donation to Hack Club ; Framework says the donation will be used to buy Framework 12 laptops for high school students.

    The Laptop 12 was built to be a more budget-friendly system, which is reflected in its specs, screen size, and its mostly plastic construction. But like the Laptop 13, the Laptop 12 prioritizes upgradeability and repairability and retains the USB-C-based Expansion Card system that was the Laptop 13's biggest innovation when it was introduced. Each Laptop 12 has four Expansion Card bays plus a headphone jack, allowing the installation of USB-C, USB-A, DisplayPort, and HDMI ports, as well as the other Expansion Cards Framework offers.

    Read full article

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    • tagtech tagtech tagtech tagframework tagframework tagframework tagframework laptop tagframework laptop tagframework laptop tagframework laptop 12 tagframework laptop 12 tagframework laptop 12 tagtech tagtech tagtech tagframework tagframework tagframework tagframework laptop tagframework laptop tagframework laptop tagframework laptop 12 tagframework laptop 12 tagframework laptop 12 tagtech tagtech tagtech tagframework tagframework tagframework tagframework laptop tagframework laptop tagframework laptop tagframework laptop 12 tagframework laptop 12 tagframework laptop 12

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Tuesday Telescope: Does this Milky Way image remind you of Powers of 10?

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 8 April 2025 • 1 minute

    When I was a kid, I was fascinated by the Powers of 10 video , which came out in the 1970s. Perhaps you remember it, with the narrator taking us both outward toward the fathomless end of the Universe and then, reversing course, guiding us back to Earth and inside a proton. The film gave a younger me a good sense of just how large the Universe around us really is.

    What I did not know until much later is that the short film was made by the Eames Office , which was founded by the noted designers Charles Eames and Ray Kaiser. It's the same organization that produced the Eames Lounge Chair. It goes to show you the value of good design across genres (shoutout to Ars' resident designer, Aurich Lawson ).

    Anyway, I say all that because the Power of 10 film continues to live in my head, rent-free, decades later. It was the first thing I thought of when looking at today's image of the Milky Way Galaxy's center. The main image showcases huge vertical filaments, with the supermassive black hole at the galaxy's core clearly visible. This image, captured by a South African radio telescope named MeerKAT, also shows the ghostly, bubble-like remnants of supernovas that exploded over millennia.

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Tuesday Telescope: Does this Milky Way image remind you of Powers of 10?

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 8 April 2025 • 1 minute

    When I was a kid, I was fascinated by the Powers of 10 video , which came out in the 1970s. Perhaps you remember it, with the narrator taking us both outward toward the fathomless end of the Universe and then, reversing course, guiding us back to Earth and inside a proton. The film gave a younger me a good sense of just how large the Universe around us really is.

    What I did not know until much later is that the short film was made by the Eames Office , which was founded by the noted designers Charles Eames and Ray Kaiser. It's the same organization that produced the Eames Lounge Chair. It goes to show you the value of good design across genres (shoutout to Ars' resident designer, Aurich Lawson ).

    Anyway, I say all that because the Power of 10 film continues to live in my head, rent-free, decades later. It was the first thing I thought of when looking at today's image of the Milky Way Galaxy's center. The main image showcases huge vertical filaments, with the supermassive black hole at the galaxy's core clearly visible. This image, captured by a South African radio telescope named MeerKAT, also shows the ghostly, bubble-like remnants of supernovas that exploded over millennia.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagspace tagspace tagspace tagdaily telescope tagdaily telescope tagdaily telescope tagspace tagspace tagspace tagdaily telescope tagdaily telescope tagdaily telescope tagspace tagspace tagspace tagdaily telescope tagdaily telescope tagdaily telescope

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    • Ar chevron_right

      Tuesday Telescope: Does this Milky Way image remind you of Powers of 10?

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 8 April 2025 • 1 minute

    When I was a kid, I was fascinated by the Powers of 10 video , which came out in the 1970s. Perhaps you remember it, with the narrator taking us both outward toward the fathomless end of the Universe and then, reversing course, guiding us back to Earth and inside a proton. The film gave a younger me a good sense of just how large the Universe around us really is.

    What I did not know until much later is that the short film was made by the Eames Office , which was founded by the noted designers Charles Eames and Ray Kaiser. It's the same organization that produced the Eames Lounge Chair. It goes to show you the value of good design across genres (shoutout to Ars' resident designer, Aurich Lawson ).

    Anyway, I say all that because the Power of 10 film continues to live in my head, rent-free, decades later. It was the first thing I thought of when looking at today's image of the Milky Way Galaxy's center. The main image showcases huge vertical filaments, with the supermassive black hole at the galaxy's core clearly visible. This image, captured by a South African radio telescope named MeerKAT, also shows the ghostly, bubble-like remnants of supernovas that exploded over millennia.

    Read full article

    Comments

    • tagspace tagspace tagspace tagdaily telescope tagdaily telescope tagdaily telescope tagspace tagspace tagspace tagdaily telescope tagdaily telescope tagdaily telescope tagspace tagspace tagspace tagdaily telescope tagdaily telescope tagdaily telescope

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      A military satellite waiting to launch with ULA will now fly with SpaceX

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 8 April 2025

    For the second time in six months, SpaceX will deploy a US military satellite that was sitting in storage, waiting for a slot on United Launch Alliance's launch schedule.

    Space Systems Command, which oversees the military's launch program, announced Monday that it is reassigning the launch of a Global Positioning System satellite from ULA's Vulcan rocket to SpaceX's Falcon 9. This satellite, designated GPS III SV-08 (Space Vehicle-08), will join the Space Force's fleet of navigation satellites beaming positioning and timing signals for military and civilian users around the world.

    The Space Force booked the Vulcan rocket to launch this spacecraft in 2023, when ULA hoped to begin flying military satellites on its new rocket by mid-2024. The Vulcan rocket is now scheduled to launch its first national security mission around the middle of this year, following the Space Force's certification of ULA's new launcher last month.

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    • tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 taggps taggps taggps taglaunch taglaunch taglaunch tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagvulcan tagvulcan tagvulcan tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 taggps taggps taggps taglaunch taglaunch taglaunch tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagvulcan tagvulcan tagvulcan tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 taggps taggps taggps taglaunch taglaunch taglaunch tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagvulcan tagvulcan tagvulcan

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    • Ar chevron_right

      A military satellite waiting to launch with ULA will now fly with SpaceX

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 8 April 2025

    For the second time in six months, SpaceX will deploy a US military satellite that was sitting in storage, waiting for a slot on United Launch Alliance's launch schedule.

    Space Systems Command, which oversees the military's launch program, announced Monday that it is reassigning the launch of a Global Positioning System satellite from ULA's Vulcan rocket to SpaceX's Falcon 9. This satellite, designated GPS III SV-08 (Space Vehicle-08), will join the Space Force's fleet of navigation satellites beaming positioning and timing signals for military and civilian users around the world.

    The Space Force booked the Vulcan rocket to launch this spacecraft in 2023, when ULA hoped to begin flying military satellites on its new rocket by mid-2024. The Vulcan rocket is now scheduled to launch its first national security mission around the middle of this year, following the Space Force's certification of ULA's new launcher last month.

    Read full article

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    • tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 taggps taggps taggps taglaunch taglaunch taglaunch tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagvulcan tagvulcan tagvulcan tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 taggps taggps taggps taglaunch taglaunch taglaunch tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagvulcan tagvulcan tagvulcan tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 taggps taggps taggps taglaunch taglaunch taglaunch tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagvulcan tagvulcan tagvulcan

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    • Ar chevron_right

      A military satellite waiting to launch with ULA will now fly with SpaceX

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica • 8 April 2025

    For the second time in six months, SpaceX will deploy a US military satellite that was sitting in storage, waiting for a slot on United Launch Alliance's launch schedule.

    Space Systems Command, which oversees the military's launch program, announced Monday that it is reassigning the launch of a Global Positioning System satellite from ULA's Vulcan rocket to SpaceX's Falcon 9. This satellite, designated GPS III SV-08 (Space Vehicle-08), will join the Space Force's fleet of navigation satellites beaming positioning and timing signals for military and civilian users around the world.

    The Space Force booked the Vulcan rocket to launch this spacecraft in 2023, when ULA hoped to begin flying military satellites on its new rocket by mid-2024. The Vulcan rocket is now scheduled to launch its first national security mission around the middle of this year, following the Space Force's certification of ULA's new launcher last month.

    Read full article

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    • tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 taggps taggps taggps taglaunch taglaunch taglaunch tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagvulcan tagvulcan tagvulcan tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 taggps taggps taggps taglaunch taglaunch taglaunch tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagvulcan tagvulcan tagvulcan tagspace tagspace tagspace tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 tagfalcon 9 taggps taggps taggps taglaunch taglaunch taglaunch tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagmilitary space tagspacex tagspacex tagspacex tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagunited launch alliance tagvulcan tagvulcan tagvulcan

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