PC obsolescence is obsolete | manufacturer new computerのブログ

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PC obsolescence is obsolete

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The situation is somewhat different in laptops, where trimming power consumption and slowly increasing battery life have a direct impact on the components you can put inside a system. Even here, however, the trend has shifted. Apple’s MacBook Pro with Retina Display has been rightly criticized for its non-replaceable battery, proprietary storage, and soldered-in RAM. What’s striking about the situation is that the issue is one of replacing broken parts, not upgrading old ones.

Are there people who need more than the 8GB of RAM that the lower-tier MacBook with battery like dell KD496 battery , Dell JD616 Battery , Dell TG226 Battery , Dell RD300 Battery , Dell UG260 Battery , Dell Latitude D530 Battery , Dell Precision Mobile Workstation M20 Battery , Dell G2053 Battery , Dell 1M590 Battery , Dell Latitude 100L Battery , Dell 6T475 Battery , Dell Inspiron 11Z Battery Pro w/RD offers? Yes. But if you’re one of those people, chances are you know it already. There’s no operating system or general software suite coming down the pipe that’s going to push the 8GB limit, nothing in the works that will unexpectedly turn your hard drive (assuming you still own a hard drive) into a chittering swarm of crickets.

The desktop’s evolution is effectively over and the laptop isn’t far behind. The latter is being driven by advances in 3D graphics and GPGPU capability. These abilities are than backported to the desktop space, where they keep things moving along, at least a bit. Tablets and phones are now driving evolution in computing, and that’s not necessarily a bad thing. If you create content, program, or design, chances are that you do it on a desktop or laptop. Long lifespans, stable designs, and strong relative performance are essential to those roles. The fact that the hardware is dirt cheap helps to bridge the digital divide — cell phones and tablets may be at the forefront of what’s hip, but beige boxes with wired Ethernet still have a vital role to play when it comes to pushing internet access out to the poorer segments of society.

Do I miss the days when Nvidia drivers and chipset launches could boost performance by 20-30% across a huge range of applications? Yes. But would I trade them for the data destroying sound card conflicts, substandard driver support, and days when Windows would BSOD if you crossed your eyes at it? Not really. And I like the fact that the computer I built for my parents in 2008 is still “blazing fast” with the addition of an SSD and a bit more RAM, as opposed to needing an all-new system with a new OS installation. These days, a laptop replacement is more likely to be accident-related than upgrade-driven, and desktops should have a useful lifespan of 6-8 years. It’s not as exciting, but it’s arguably more useful and certainly far more economic.