Yes I’m well aware that the storage they use is just raw flash chips, I followed the bs reasoning during the Mac Studio tear-downs.
How is that BS reasoning? There are valid technical reasons not to use industry-standard SSDs. From the freedom to innovate at your own pace to tightly coupling the SSD controller with the OS. Adding third-party firmware into the mix decreases system reliability. For example, many third-party SSDs controllers don't honour the FLUSh command, making them less reliable.
Yet Apple has blocked upgrading the drive on the Mac Studio. Think of all those MBP with connectors that were just fine.
They didn't block upgrading the drive, they just didn't bother adding support for reconfiguring the SoC firmware in the Configurator. Moot point anyway since these SSDs are not for sale in the first place. It's just not a supported use case.
This is a money grab pure and simple. This is a company move to increase profits and keep shareholders happy, not customers.
It's a design choice. It would be much cheaper overall for Apple to use third-party drives and don't care about the details. To dismiss this as a simple "money grab" is naive at best. You might dislike Apple's hardware strategy, but that doesn't make it invalid.
Well hell who are these computers for then? How many young people (students) will be able to get a Mac? If you charge so much that it doesn't make financial or practical sense to buy a mac how is the mac going to be a sustainable platform for software development if the customer base dwindles?
Where do you see the evidence of customer base dwindling? Mac market share is actually rising after the introduction of Apple Silicon. Sure, some users will be put off by the way how these machines are non-serviceable, but then again, that is a very small interest group. As I said before, users don't upgrade computers. Again, you might disagree with this, but these are facts. As to students... Macs have never been cheap, if anything, Apple Silicon gives you much more value per money.
Also from my own personal experience with a soldered and glued mac (I ordered the top spec model with the highest capacity SSD, so I have the money), it has not been good! it has broken more than any mac I have ever had and I had the 1st gen intel MBP in its skinny aluminium chassis.
Your anecdotal experience does not reflect the average experience. There is no evidence that laptops with soldered-on components are any less reliable. There are arguments to be made that they are more reliable (fewer points of failure and more reliable connection).
Like I said it is something I cannot accept and people should not accept. What kind of world are we creating where everything is going to be disposable the minute it’s not fit for use?
I fully agree with you that I don't want to live in a world of disposable devices. But what you are presenting is a false dichotomy. Upgradeability is not the answer to less waste. Upgradeability is dictatorship of minority and it comes with very real cost — for environment, innovation, reliability and power efficiency. My vision is reusability and component-level refurbishing. Old or broken computers should be stripped for parts and rebuilt in specialised facilities. When your tightly integrated machine is broken, you should just get a new one while the old one is fixed on a component level or stripped if repair is not feasible. This would be better for the environment and economy while allowing innovation at a steady pace. Yes, it would be more expensive overall. But I'd rather pay a local technician and support local economy than some dictator state that controls rare mineral mines or dumps electronic garbage on islands.
However, users don't like this model because they want "new stuff". It's really ridiculous in my opinion, but that's how people are unfortunately.
Are you telling me people on this forum would not upgrade the storage themselves? The people on this forum are the promoters, the ones who get people to switch. There would be no Apple without people opening and tinkering with things, breaking systems, repairing things and repurposing things.
Sure, people who upgrade are certainly over-represented on these forums. And yet I still don't see any mass exodus, which means that Apple's strategy is not as alienating to its enthusiast user base as you might think. I did upgrade my MacBook Pro back around 2010 since I wanted more performance, so I went from a larger HDD to a smaller SSD. It made sense back then, doesn't make sense today, where you already get the fastest thing around anyway.