And by the way, for the repairability folks: replaceable RAM on mobile devices is going away for good reason. Two SODIMMs is 128 bits of multi-GHz bus across multiple cm of board and a connector. That *eats* power. This isn't manufacturers being out to screw us, it's physics.
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Replying to @mutesplash
What *kind* of socket? Even if you do a CPU socket thing ($$$ and adds thickness) just making space for the thing plus the interconnect significantly increases total trace length. There's a reason why the M1 has ~0mm between the SoC die and the memory dies.
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Replying to @marcan42 @mutesplash
People aren't doing these MCMs just for space; you get better electrical performance out of these high spec carriers than a plain old PCB.
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Replying to @marcan42
Sure, but the want for this ultimately boils down to money. People don't want to be taken advantage of by RAM markups and want the benefits of not needing more RAM until later in the computer's life
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Replying to @mutesplash @marcan42
boils down to usability. Aslong as they don't solder the battery, I don't care. Wonder how much power is saved, exactly. Would be interesting to see
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Battery connectors have no drawbacks and plenty of manufacturers have shown that you *can* build repairable devices (at the low speed component level) without sacrificing form factor. So yes, I agree there.
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