I was looking at the new Mac Studio and it's impressive. New efficiencies. New ways to get more cores, more pipes, get more flips for less watts. On-time delivery and multiplying and increasing computations-per-second.
The one thing that doesn't seem to change with all the constant upgrades in tech is that if you spend upwards of $2,000 as a starting price for a computer, you're still getting 512 GB of onboard storage. The same I paid a little extra for to get on my wife's M1 Air. Half of what came with my desktop computer a decade ago. And the cost to get more starts to be a car payment, mortgage payment, or boat payment size to as much as double it.
My wife has an M1 Air for making music. It works brilliantly for that. The extra to upgrade to 512 was enough for the basics. But huge sound libraries like professional orchestras take up nearly half-a-terabyte by themselves. The answer might be "well, use an iMac! Or the new Mac Studio!" Except that those costlier options come with, still, lesser storage, and no easy way to swap in more drives.
All the speed and efficiency has raced ahead to meet what average users and creators might need. All except storage. Which, if you're even a modest content creator, can never be enough. The solution of "the cloud" doesn't work for the people living in places without guaranteed high-speed internet. We have a pile of Western Digital external drives. All connected via precarious, faulty, bendable dongles.
My gripe may be with Apple, but not exclusively so. While I'm not disinterested in building a PC, the main reason I would build a PC is because that is just about the only way I could add or remove extra storage on my machine. And that's an annoying reason just to build a PC.
I would like more machines to have a slot in them (like a tiny version of an old floppy drive?!?) which I could insert/eject an M2 drive. They have the room. There is no engineering reason why this couldn't exist. I may have other reasons to get a Framework laptop. But being able to do this may be one of the key reasons.
The one thing that doesn't seem to change with all the constant upgrades in tech is that if you spend upwards of $2,000 as a starting price for a computer, you're still getting 512 GB of onboard storage. The same I paid a little extra for to get on my wife's M1 Air. Half of what came with my desktop computer a decade ago. And the cost to get more starts to be a car payment, mortgage payment, or boat payment size to as much as double it.
My wife has an M1 Air for making music. It works brilliantly for that. The extra to upgrade to 512 was enough for the basics. But huge sound libraries like professional orchestras take up nearly half-a-terabyte by themselves. The answer might be "well, use an iMac! Or the new Mac Studio!" Except that those costlier options come with, still, lesser storage, and no easy way to swap in more drives.
All the speed and efficiency has raced ahead to meet what average users and creators might need. All except storage. Which, if you're even a modest content creator, can never be enough. The solution of "the cloud" doesn't work for the people living in places without guaranteed high-speed internet. We have a pile of Western Digital external drives. All connected via precarious, faulty, bendable dongles.
My gripe may be with Apple, but not exclusively so. While I'm not disinterested in building a PC, the main reason I would build a PC is because that is just about the only way I could add or remove extra storage on my machine. And that's an annoying reason just to build a PC.
I would like more machines to have a slot in them (like a tiny version of an old floppy drive?!?) which I could insert/eject an M2 drive. They have the room. There is no engineering reason why this couldn't exist. I may have other reasons to get a Framework laptop. But being able to do this may be one of the key reasons.