Intel wants your legs to be cooled when you use a laptop. A laptop can get really hot when you let it sits on you for quite some time. Bad designed laptops end up be really hot quite quickly, and if you touch these, you think you are touching the hot part of the stoves; it’s a little exaggerating, but it does make you think that laptop makers need to redesign their products. Intel promotes a new way of cooling a laptop to prevent heat from inside the laptop heating up the outside of the laptop by using Intel Laminar Flow Technology.
Months back, Intel demonstrated laminar flow in Taiwan using animation to show how laminar flow works. You can picture this, inside a jet engine, extreme heat exists, and if the heat is not redirect away from a jet’s internal combustible components, the result could be catastrophic for a jet without a proper cooling technology. Although a laptop’s temperature could never rise to the level of a jet, but by implementing laminar flow, Intel suggests that the heat within a laptop could be redirect to a proper outer ducting and away from a laptop’s skin.
Laminar flow could be a crucial element that laptop makers would want to use on their super thin laptop models. Nowadays, more laptop makers are trying to make thinner laptops, as thin as possible. Laminar flow can provide a solution for laptop makers. It’s not clear how much thinner a laptop could get by implementing laminar flow, but you and I can expect that the future laptops to be found in electronic stores near you may be a lot thinner than you could ever imagine. Source.
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