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Andrew Liszewski

Andrew Liszewski

Senior Reporter, News

Andrew Liszewski is a Senior Reporter for The Verge covering consumer technology with a focus on gadgets and electronics. He's been covering tech since 2011 including previous roles at Gizmodo and The Messenger. When he's not staying on top of the latest and greatest tech, Andrew's hobbies include photography but most of his rare moments of free time are spent re-playing the classic retro games of his youth and adding to an ever-growing collection of handheld gaming systems.

The GPD Duo dual-screen OLED laptop is finally available for preorder.

After its official reveal last May and a full spec dump released in June, preorders for the GPD Duo laptop are now available through Indiegogo. Early backers can get one with an AMD Ryzen 7 8840U processor, 16GB of RAM, 512GB of storage, and a pair of 13.3-inch OLED screens for $1,274 (down from $1,430) with delivery expected in late November.


The GPD Duo dual-screen laptop with both screens folded and in tablet mode.
The GPD Duo features a pair of stacked OLED screens that can fold down to turn the laptop into a tablet.
Image: GPD HK
You can now accessorize your Framework laptop with Lego.

If you’re a Framework laptop user with access to a 3D printer you’ve now got an important question to ask yourself. Do you prioritize being able to accessorize your machine with Lego using this 3D-printed adapter with studs and tubes that fits into the Framework’s expansion card port? Or is adding another USB-C or HDMI port a higher priority? Decisions, decisions...


Two examples of Lego used to upgrade a Framework laptop.
Got Lego? You can use it to further upgrade your Framework laptop with this 3D-printed adapter.
Image: Printables
Raspberry Pi now sells its own branded microSD cards.

The Raspberry Pi 5 microcomputer can take advantage of Class A2 SD cards to boost read and write speeds, but only if the card itself properly supports the standard. Not all do, which prompted the company to partner with Longsys to create its own A2-compatible card that guarantees support for performance increasing features like “command queueing.”

A 32GB version will sell for $9.95.


A Raspberry Pi-branded microSD card being inserted into a Raspberry Pi microcomputer.
A 32GB Raspberry Pi microSD card will sell for $9.95.
Image: Raspberry Pi