Lappier

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(I miss being able to do that)
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*The screen has a considerably higher pixel density with the 3-D model, however the text is still pixelated.
*The screen has a considerably higher pixel density with the 3-D model, however the text is still pixelated.
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**The Lappier also has a much smaller bezel around the screen.
*Its power cord is white as opposed to black.
*Its power cord is white as opposed to black.
*It is supposedly more expensive than the Lappy 486.
*It is supposedly more expensive than the Lappy 486.
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*It displays the date on its Start Screen.
 
*The Lappier has rounded edges as opposed to the Lappy's sharper edges.
*The Lappier has rounded edges as opposed to the Lappy's sharper edges.
-
**The Lappier also has a much smaller bezel around the screen.
 
*Clicking on the Lappier's screen does not simulate LCD distortion — or do anything, for that matter.
*Clicking on the Lappier's screen does not simulate LCD distortion — or do anything, for that matter.

Revision as of 12:33, 10 April 2015

"Just like the previous model, only crappier. I mean, more expensive. I mean, lappier."

The Lappier (officially spelled Lappier) is Strong Bad's fifth computer, a laptop introduced on April 1st, 2015 in sbemail206 and, presumably, Compy, Inc.'s successor to the Lappy 486. Strong Bad discovered the Lappier buried under a cloud of dust where his previous computer, the Compé, had been; he claimed the dust "compressed" the Compé into the Lappier.

Differences between the Lappier and the Lappy 486

While it is incredibly similar to the Lappy 486 in its design asthetic and its name, it does have a few differences to its predecessor.

  • It does not have an Ethernet port on its back.
  • It is considerably thinner in depth, but larger in size.
  • The Lappy on the screen rotates with a 3-D model rather than a pixelated 2-D model.
  • The screen has a considerably higher pixel density with the 3-D model, however the text is still pixelated.
    • The Lappier also has a much smaller bezel around the screen.
  • Its power cord is white as opposed to black.
  • It is supposedly more expensive than the Lappy 486.
  • The Lappier has rounded edges as opposed to the Lappy's sharper edges.
  • Clicking on the Lappier's screen does not simulate LCD distortion — or do anything, for that matter.
Back of the Lappier
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