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A well-designed laptop which is heading toward zero upgradeablility.



Aside from PCMCIA/ExpressCard upgrades, which are useless nowadays thanks to USB2/3, the only upgrades available to laptops are memory + disk. RAM is cheap enough where companies can toss in 8gb (soon, 16gb) without a second thought, which is more than enough for probably 99% of the customer base for as long as the laptop is in service.

That leaves the disk drive as the one non-upgradable part. I imagine part of the reason for this is the (relative) bulkiness of the 2.5" SSD form factor. Are there any other standardized sizes that could work in a rMBP form factor? 1.8" maybe? The 11" MBA may have problems fitting it, but a swappable 1.8" SSD on the larger models would be quite nice.


mSATA is the standard for tiny SSDs.


Zero upgradeability (in the sense of zero need to upgrade: does not break, is powerful enough) is a good sign of well designed.


So the SSD is going to work forever? Because that is what I am afraid of.


Upgradeability != repairability.




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