Skip to primary content

Prime-WoW

My site, my way, no big company can change this

Main menu

  • Home
  • Discord
  • Forums
  • Games
    • 7DtD
      • 7DtD Map
      • 7DtD Official Forums
      • 7DtD Wiki
    • Minecraft
      • Survival Map
      • Vanilla Map
      • FTB Map
      • FTB Wiki
      • Download FTB Client
    • NWN
      • NWN Wiki
      • NWN Lexicon
      • NWN Vault
      • NWNX
      • NWN Info
      • Rhun Guide
    • Terraria
      • Terraria Map
    • WoW
      • Prime-WoW Site
      • WoW Armory
  • Unfiltered RSS
    • Bikes
    • Games
      • Kotaku
      • PS4 News
      • VR
    • Nature
      • TreeHugger
      • Survival
    • Technology
      • Hardware
        • Hot Hardware
      • Linux
        • Linux Today
        • LWN.net
        • LXer
        • Phoronix
        • RPi
      • LifeHacker
      • Akihabara News
      • AnandTech
      • Ars Technica
      • Engadget
      • Gear & Gadgets
      • Geekologie
      • Gizmodo
      • [H]ardOCP
      • io9
      • Slashdot
      • TG Daily

Post navigation

← Previous Next →

MacBook Air gets solid-state active cooling in intriguing demo

Posted on November 29, 2023 by Xordac Prime
MacBook Air with AirJet Mini

Enlarge / The active cooling chips are labeled and located in the upper-left corner near a custom heatsink in the 15-inch MacBook Air. (credit: Frore Systems)

What if laptops could get fan-level cooling without moving parts? We could get thinner laptops, for one. We could also potentially squeeze more performance out of today’s already impressively thin designs.

That’s what San Jose, California startup Frore Systems is trying to convince laptop makers of as it looks for the first OEM to adopt what it describes as the first solid-state active cooling chip.

Most recently, the company equipped the M2 15-inch MacBook Air with three of its chips, dubbed AirJet Minis. Media witnesses to a recent demonstration reported that the chips helped bring MacBook Pro-comparable performance to sustained heavy workloads on the MacBook Air.

Read 24 remaining paragraphs | Comments



Source: Ars Technica – MacBook Air gets solid-state active cooling in intriguing demo

This entry was posted in Ars Technica, Unfiltered RSS and tagged Ars Technica by Xordac Prime. Bookmark the permalink.
Proudly powered by WordPress