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252 points diwank | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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throwaway48476 ◴[] No.41850185[source]
It is interesting that one of their examples is a "community repair fair", they want to market a sheen of social responsibility without actually taking part themselves.
replies(5): >>41850328 #>>41850406 #>>41850430 #>>41853373 #>>41856540 #
giancarlostoro ◴[] No.41850430[source]
Lowkey wish their laptops would be as they used to be. Being able to swap RAM or hard drives is so basic but so useful.
replies(3): >>41852852 #>>41853334 #>>41853505 #
talldayo ◴[] No.41852852[source]
Drives in particular. Let them solder the memory if they absolutely have to, but exposing even an empty NVMe slot should be standard for laptops. Unfortunately, Apple makes a pretty penny off the storage surcharge so I wouldn't really anticipate that anytime soon.
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loopdoend ◴[] No.41853139[source]
I will accept the trade off for the performance boost tbh.
replies(1): >>41853581 #
lucb1e ◴[] No.41853581[source]
What performance boost? As in, same software running for comparison on the hardware of interest, one soldered and the other not. I never heard that soldering your SSD on makes it faster...
replies(2): >>41853731 #>>41856273 #
1. jsheard ◴[] No.41853731[source]
It doesn't, Apples SSD performance is fine but unremarkable. Their current machines will do around ~6GB/sec read and ~5GB/sec write, which isn't even at the limit of socketed PCIe4 NVMe drives, nevermind the bleeding edge PCIe5 drives which can do up to ~14GB/sec read and ~12GB/sec write (albeit with excessive heat and power consumption for a laptop).

Soldering the RAM has legitimate performance benefits, but soldering the SSD is just to save space and upsell overpriced upgrades.

replies(1): >>41856078 #
2. throwaway48476 ◴[] No.41856078[source]
It's crazy that some people think it's apple so it must be special and better not realizing NVMe is a industry standard.