He knows his market. As others have mentioned, most casual users don’t need or care about that. Personal computing has become much more niche.
Comment on Asus Co-CEO: MacBook Neo Is a 'Shock' to the PC Industry
Ice@lemmy.zip 3 days ago
Am I the only one even a little happy to see the head of a major company mentioning upgradability as an appeal for customers?
Please please stick with two unsoldered SODIMM slots Asus.
ieGod@lemmy.zip 1 day ago
boonhet@sopuli.xyz 2 days ago
I don’t know what Asus is doing as I haven’t owned one, but some manufacturers are finally starting to do LPCAMM2. Which near me is actually cheaper than SODIMMs. And is technically superior. One reason (besides being able to sell you a new device when memory goes bad) that manufacturers solder RAM it is that it allows for faster speeds than SODIMMs, at lower power requirements.
bitwolf@sh.itjust.works 2 days ago
Really?!
The only laptop I was with LPCAMM was a specific Lenovo laptop that used LPCAMM to connect to a SODIMM daughter board.
Are there others you know of?
boonhet@sopuli.xyz 2 days ago
Thinkpad P1 Gen 7 and the upcoming T14 Gen 7. The latter got 10/10 in repairability from iFixit, and the T lineup has always been great at longevity, repairability, and drive-over-it-with-a-tractor-or-pour-water-on-the-keyboard-survivability. I’m suspecting most upcoming Thinkpads will have it. Some Thinkbooks do as well, but I don’t trust any Lenovo without a Thinkpad name on it, and not even all of those.
Dell Pro Max lineup as well.
They’re only just starting to come out. Within the next few years I imagine most manufacturers will have offerings with LPCAMM.
rekabis@lemmy.ca 2 days ago
That may be the case, but the most irritating thing is that thy fill all available spots with the lowest-capacity chips that meet the requested provisioning spec, instead of taking the requested provisioning and using the fewest higher-capacity chips needed to meet the provisioning spec. The latter, at least, would leave spots open for an authorized repair location to manually solder on more approved chips of compatible spec.