Craob wants to release the Craob X, their newest concept laptop. The Craob X is a fully wireless laptop that runs on an Intel Alder Lake processor and features cutting-edge memory and display technology. The lack of any ports on the company’s design, however, is the most notable aspect, making this the pinnacle in totally wireless capability in a laptop.
My Laptop Guide was the first to break the news of this ground-breaking laptop design. The Craob website was able to access images and a few specifications for the gadget; nonetheless, the Craob website does provide a few information, including a bezel-less 4K+ display and LPDDR5 connection.
The new Craob X laptop is powered by the Intel Core i7-1280P Alder Lake processor, which Team Blue unveiled earlier this month. The Craob X is a 13.3-inch laptop with a 4K+ bezel-less screen and a punch-hole camera, which is a departure from the newest MacBook Pro models.
The Craob X laptop comes with up to 32GB of LPDDR5 RAM and 2 TB of PCIe 4.0 storage. For wireless connectivity, the new notebook will use the most up-to-date WiFi6E technology.
The new laptop is a notebook that has no ports in its physical form. That isn’t to say it doesn’t make use of ports in any way. There is no USB, MiniJack, Thunderbolt, SD card slots, or charging ports on the laptop. Because of the laptop’s small 7mm thickness, Craob’s design choice makes sense. Physical connectivity is provided by the bundled magnetic charger, which is attached to the laptop’s lid.
This design is made much more remarkable by the use of wireless technologies. Because the Craob X has no physical connectors (portless design), it lacks I/O ports including USB Tyle A/C, Thunderbolt, MiniJack, SD card slot, and even a charging port. Because this laptop is only 7mm thick, it would be extremely difficult to put on this design. All of these connectors, however, will be accessible via a magnetic wireless charger attached to the lid. The magnetic charger has USB-C, USB-A, Thunderbolt, an SD card port, and a headphone jack, allowing the user to get things done without relying solely on wireless communication.
Craob has yet to announce a release date for the Craob X laptop. At this moment, there are no price points available. With such a distinctive computing design, a fully wireless system may come at a premium price.
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