Teardown reveals SSD ports, these are not soldered down
Someone like OWC will make them. Someone in China will find the OEMs or B-stocks and sell them on Aliexpress.Does not mean you can upgrade them. Maybe an Apple certified repair center could with the right software.
The SSDs on T2 Macs are paired to the SoC, I would expect the M1 Macs to be the same.Someone like OWC will make them. Someone in China will find the OEMs or B-stocks and sell them on Aliexpress.
The Mac Pro is a T2 mac. Apple itself sells SSD kits for it.The SSDs on T2 Macs are paired to the SoC, I would expect the M1 Macs to be the same.
If you want to upgrade your SSDs you have to buy the Apple kit, there are no third party solutions, and you have to have a second Mac handy to run the configuration software they provide to pair the SSD to the T2 SoC.The Mac Pro is a T2 mac. Apple itself sells SSD kits for it.
As long as it's not soldered but socketed instead, there is hope.
I think the problem is greater than just the lock (though that is major issue), I am pretty sure the T2 and M1 SSD interfaces are non-standard. I think some of the controller logic is embedded in the Apple SoC.I haven’t been following the iMac Pro or Mac Pro, both were still on Intel Xeon but have T2; have their SSD “lock” been defeated or was it concluded to be impossible / not worth the effort?
The die on the AMD chip is also nowhere close to that size as that is the IHSNot a fair comparison since that isn't really chip size rather the die size. The die includes the M1 chip and the RAM chips which isn't the case on the AMD chip.
I'm still waiting to see if Max Tech was able to reassemble it or if the M1 Ultra is a new coaster.Let's see how long it takes before someone attempts an upgrade, and what the outcome will be.
I thought the same thing after watching the videoI'm still waiting to see if Max Tech was able to reassemble it or if the M1 Ultra is a new coaster.
Technically, if it can replaced it can be replaced with a larger unit. Which means it is, in fact, "upgradable". Apple's reasoning or planned usage doesn't change that fact. I imagine at some point, someone is going to figure out to swap theirs out. Or if one dies, put a bigger one in as it's replacement.Misleading title. It's "serviceable" to benefit Apple so they don't have to replace the whole main board but it doesn't benefit the customer in the sense that you can swap in cost competitive off-the-shelf NVMe SSD.
It's upgradable but is it user upgradable? I don't think so. I doubt Apple will sell the parts to anyone but an authorized repair facility.Technically, if it can replaced it can be replaced with a larger unit. Which means it is, in fact, "upgradable". Apple's reasoning or planned usage doesn't change that fact. I imagine at some point, someone is going to figure out to swap theirs out. Or if one dies, put a bigger one in as it's replacement.
probably single card up to 2TB.I would think the 512GB SSD option is a single card, 1TB & higher would be two cards; two x 512GB cards for a 1TB SSD, two x 1TB cards for a 2TB SSD, etc. ...?