This 7-screen Obscene laptop has only 1-hour battery life

T.e Laptop Aurora 7 it appears to have been built straight from the imagination of a Hollywood prop builder working on a bad hacker flick. But with seven folding screens, there is little chance that anyone could use this beast on their lap. It’s a mobile transformation workflow for those who need more screen builds than they have room for monitors.

Created by a UK company called Expansion, the Aurora 7 is pretty much just a prototype at this stage of the game (as evidenced by the widespread need for 3D printed parts), but it is designed to be a truly mobile workflow for everyone from developers to content creators to even well-funded gamers wanting a more immersive experience from computer they don’t have to leave at home.

Powered by an Intel i9 9900K processor backed by 64GB of DDR4 RAM and an NVIDIA GTX 1060 series graphics card, the Aurora 7 also comes with 2TB of hardware storage and an additional 2.5 TB of SSD storage, plus all the ports you might need to expand its capacity even further. But the star of the show is the intricate mosaic of screens that include four 17.3-inch 4K (3840) x 2160) LCDs – two in picture mode and two in landscape – as well three less 7-all inch scratches push 1920 x 1200 pixels, one of which is located in the laptop wrist.

Perhaps even more impressive is that all of these screens are engineered to fold up to form horizontal image that can be carried in a bag – although it is a bag large enough to stash 4.3-inchthick laptop that weighs 26 pounds. The creators of the Aurora 7 hope to weld its weight to a weight of 22 pounds when all is said and done, but this is not a laptop you want to drag to the office and back every day. This is a device for which you want to build a custom wheel card.

Although the Aurora 7 is no exception prototype form right now, Expanscape is still there offering to sell his creatures for users who want more pixels than ever before on a shoe horn on a laptop before. But not only is the company not making pricing information public, it is also urging interested buyers to sign an NDA promising to keep a mother on the money they paid for the station one-of-a-kind mobile work. In general, prototypes always cost more than a user-ready version of a device with the time and money required to create individual parts. Making them by the thousands on a production line greatly reduces costs, but don’t hope that the Aurora 7 will be close to a reasonable price if and when it becomes available to the public.

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