Matching specifications as closely as possible, I configured a comparable ThinkPad P53 for $3,969 and Dell Precision 7540 for a steep $5,077, as well as an HP ZBook 15 G6 for $3,805 (though the last only goes up to a 6GB Quadro RTX 3000 GPU). The competition among mobile workstations is formidable. Its warranty is a disappointing one year, although Razer offers three years of coverage for a sensible $249. The Blade 15 Studio Edition is sold in a single configuration with a 3,840-by-2,160-pixel OLED touch screen a six-core, 2.6GHz (4.5GHz turbo) Intel Core i7-9750H processor the abovementioned Max-Q Quadro RTX 5000 GPU with a whopping 16GB of GDDR6 display memory 32GB of system memory and a 1TB PCIe solid-state drive with Windows 10 Pro preinstalled.
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Blade x max fingerprint hardware not available driver#
Nevertheless, this Razer comes highly recommended, and depending on what you run day to day, its support for Nvidia's Studio driver may be sound enough assurance that this laptop will do the job. The Studio Edition is well-designed and super-chic, though it lacks the enterprise-grade feature set and independent software vendor (ISV) certifications of our current top pick for a 15.6-inch mobile workstation, the Lenovo ThinkPad P53.
![blade x max fingerprint hardware not available blade x max fingerprint hardware not available](https://cdn-files.kimovil.com/phone_front/0001/61/thumb_60921_phone_front_big.jpeg)
Its new sibling, the $3,999 Razer Blade 15 Studio Edition, is more than capable of gaming, but puts its focus on creative and design work with a 4K OLED display and Nvidia Quadro RTX 5000 Max-Q graphics. The Razer Blade 15 Advanced is a two-time PCMag Editors' Choice winner among gaming laptops.