Display
16” IPS
WQXGA 2560x1600 (16:10)
sRGB 100%
165 Hz frequency
1064.3M(8bit+2FRC) color depth
403 nits max brightness
Storage
2 SSD m.2 NVME slots
Up to 8 TB SSD storage
Memory
Non-soldered memory
Up to 64 GB RAM (8, 16, 32, 64 available)
5600 MHz RAM
2 sockets, dual channel from 16 GB
Battery
68‑watt‑hour battery
Up to 11 hours battery
Connectivity
3 USB 3.1
2 USB-C Full function PD3.0 (USB3.1 GEN1) with power delivery and video output
2 PCI Express 4.0 (max 4TB each one)
HDMI
Wifi 6 RTL8852BE-CG AC/AX
Bluetooth 5.2
Others
Full-size backlit keyboard with numeric keypad
Webcam HD 720P 1.0M with physical switch
2 microphones
2 speakers 4Ω 2W
Multi-touch touchpad
Full aluminum chassis
USB-C charging with smart battery system
There are lot's of reasons not to do so, but the most important one is probably that Slimbook uses barebones from Tongfang. You can configure the barebones to some extend but mostly only screen resolution, cpu, gpu and cooling. The smaller things like USB ports are not as configurable as you might thing.
It's still a thousand bucks new laptop that doesn't compete on connectivity. A USB 4 connection to a dock van turn this into a very capable workstation.
I also wish it would have a bigger battery. 67 watt hours is pretty low for a 16 inch computer. I never understood why these manufacturers stick with exclusively the lowest specs possible while still delivering a technically acceptable laptop.
That's only up to 11 hours. Ryzen 7000 series can get pretty thirsty when you start doing a lot. My current laptop is rated for 10 hours of battery life, but I usually get about 2-3 on a good day. My Ryzen 5000 series laptop is really good at low loads, but 6 cores will drink through it's 57 watt hour battery, and that's with a 14 inch screen and an "U" CPU.
IMO any laptop that's 15" or bigger should have at minimum a 90 watt hour battery.