as a professional device for many the SSD's need to be removable, hence the new stance by Microsoft with some Surface lines
LeeW....Do you know if the battery in the Surface products is easily replaced or is it the same as Apple?Despite my initial enthusiasm with the new approach from Microsoft I am not so keen, taken from a review I read recently. Replace, not upgrade? It's something, I will give you that but..
"Microsoft Store service agents told the tech site that the SSDs inside the Surface Laptop 3 and Surface Pro X are replaceable, but not upgradable. Any practical difference between replacing and upgrading a drive is lost on us. Regardless, this means you can't buy a base model Surface Laptop 3 and avoid Microsoft's crazy-expensive storage upgrades by swapping in your own drive because doing so puts you at risk of voiding warranty should anything go awry."
Do you know if the battery in the Surface products is easily replaced
Am I the only one who would respect this honesty and would be very likely to give Apple another chance? Or do most customers not give a damn these days and reward companies no matter what lies, mistruths and spin comes from the firm?
I agree that something has certainly changed. But I think it speaks volumes about the shortfalls of Cook if Ive did control things to that extent. Who the hell was in charge, the CEO or some lauded designer?Well no, but, show me more than an odd example of any tech company owning up to doing something wrong. There have been lots of real ****-ups across a range of providers over the years and I have never seen apologies from any of them. Not saying it is right, but not going to say this is something Apple alone does.
The only element that gives me some hope with the latest MBP is that something, significant has changed at Apple. To maintain a price point with the previous generation whilst bumping up several specs in a number of areas is unheard of, even letting the device be thicker and heavier. That is not the Apple of the last 10 years.
Sure, it's not perfect, SSD/RAM upgrades are still pricey, still difficult to service and so on but it's not just a step in the right direction, its a leap.
I get criticized for suggesting that the key change to achieve what they have in the 16" is mainly allowing the device to be bigger, in all ways. Who was the real architect behind thinner and lighter at every single opportunity? Ives. Who is not there to continue forcing the designs down that route? And look at what they have released!
I will hold on to some hope, but they already lost my trust after the MBP keyboard fiasco so I am not about to embrace them for this release, but I will give them some credit. The question is whether good things like this will continue.
Despite my initial enthusiasm with the new approach from Microsoft I am not so keen, taken from a review I read recently. Replace, not upgrade? It's something, I will give you that but..
"Microsoft Store service agents told the tech site that the SSDs inside the Surface Laptop 3 and Surface Pro X are replaceable, but not upgradable. Any practical difference between replacing and upgrading a drive is lost on us. Regardless, this means you can't buy a base model Surface Laptop 3 and avoid Microsoft's crazy-expensive storage upgrades by swapping in your own drive because doing so puts you at risk of voiding warranty should anything go awry."
as for many individuals and companies the content of the drives is not permitted to be passed to third parties. In the event of a failure the drive can be swapped the user continues without any breach of internal security standards and or contractual obligations.
So many people are coming down on Catalina, is it a bad/buggy OS?I’m software first then hardware. Catalina is the reason I’m reluctant to upgrade right now. But I am glad to see the new kb. Bodes well for the Mac line.
So many people are coming down on Catalina, is it a bad/buggy OS?
So many people are coming down on Catalina, is it a bad/buggy OS?
Another direction I have been moving in is using the iPad Pro a lot more, got the keyboard for it and whilst pricey I actually love typing on it. I use it for a lot of things on the go which I would normally use the MBP for then when I get back to my desk continue with the Mac Mini. Actually enjoying doing things that way and again, more portable than the MBP 13" and just as powerful if not more for what I use it for.
Then for everything else PC.
Sticking with that for now, was nearly impulse buying the 16" but I stopped myself, I wouldn't have kept it, I know I would be like "too big..".
So called "self-proclaimed experts" who post regularly about how wonderful Apple is and how Cook has a fiduciary responsibility to shareholders to make every dollar possible, always overlook the, in their view old-fashioned principled view that if a company is honest and upfront with its customers, it will be rewarded by repeat business.
It is no secret that Apple made quite an error with the keyboard it introduced in 2016. And to compound the error, instead of saying that it tried something and it learned that it was not the right direction. it claimed that nothing was a problem and only a minuscule number of customers were encountering issues. So minuscule that it then "tweaked" the keyboard at least twice over the next three years and introduced keyboard repair programs, the last one for a just released laptop!
So now, they have gone back to the old style keyboard which has proven over the years to work very well. Does Apple say honestly why it has changed from the butterfly keyboard? Of course not.
Here is how they justify the "new" keyboard...
New Magic Keyboard
The 16-inch MacBook Pro features a new Magic Keyboard with a refined scissor mechanism that delivers 1mm of key travel and a stable key feel, as well as an Apple-designed rubber dome that stores more potential energy for a responsive key press. Incorporating extensive research and user studies focused on human factors and key design, the 16-inch MacBook Pro delivers a keyboard with a comfortable, satisfying and quiet typing experience. The new Magic Keyboard also features a physical Escape key and an inverted-“T” arrangement for the arrow keys, along with Touch Bar and Touch ID, for a keyboard that delivers the best typing experience ever on a Mac notebook.
What a lot of BS when a simple "we realise that the direction we had taken over the past three years regarding the keyboard was not in the best interests of a substantial number of our laptop customers. As a result we have gone back to the popular and highly reliable scissor version".
Am I the only one who would respect this honesty and would be very likely to give Apple another chance? Or do most customers not give a damn these days and reward companies no matter what lies, mistruths and spin comes from the firm?