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Framework Laptop 12 review: Doing the right thing comes at a cost

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Earlier this year, Framework announced it was making a smaller, 12-inch laptop and a beefy desktop to go alongside its 13- and 16-inch notebooks. A few months later, and the former has arrived, putting the same modular, repairable laptop into a slightly smaller body. Unlike its bigger siblings, the Laptop 12 is a 12.2-inch touchscreen convertible clad in brightly colored plastic. It’s aimed at students, with a focus on robustness and quality you won’t see in the usual machines you find at the top of the bargain list. My initial impression is that it’s a damn charming piece of gear, but I immediately wonder how many kids in school will actually get to use this thing given it’s far pricier than its competitors.

Framework 79 100 Expert Score Framework Laptop 12 Framework’s 12-inch laptop is an alternative to low-cost laptops, but it is too expensive to compete. Pros It’s so cute

Satisfying keyboard

All-plastic body should take a lot of punishment Cons It’s expensive

Thermals are an issue

Lackluster performance $799 at Framework

Laptop 12 is the first Framework machine clad entirely in ABS plastic, available in black, pink, lavender, gray and green. As soon as you open the packaging, you’ll be instantly charmed by its look and feel given how different it is from the rest of the market. My green and off-white review unit (which the company calls “Sage”) stands out from the crowd almost by default. Framework founder Nirav Patel has long harbored dreams of bringing back the translucent and colorful aesthetics found in Nintendo’s Game Boy Color. Here, the 12 reminds me of the OLPC XO or one of the fancier LeapFrog “computers” that glowed up when you weren’t looking.

Daniel Cooper for Engadget

Its footprint isn’t dramatically smaller than the 13-inch model, but because it doesn’t taper like its bigger sibling, it feels a lot chunkier. The chassis has a metal frame clad in two layers of plastic that, the company promises, will take whatever shocks and bumps you throw at it. It also has the same quartet of expansion card slots, which are now available in a variety of colors if you want things to match (or clash). Plus, all of those cards can be shared with the other Framework machines since they’re all, mercifully, uniform size.

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