It’s amazing Apple has gotten away with this crap and the inability to upgrade your storage or memory on your own should be illegal .
As a PC user I feel truly privileged to view this topic from
afar.
While PCs genesis might be regarded as a thinly veilled Apple ][ knock-off, both were open platforms with well documented hardware interfaces and zero software restrictions.
The current breed of Apple compute, however, started as iPods, software based appliances who critically depended on a walled garden for its original business model of DRM for content.
The fruity cult would argue that anyone entering an Apple indenture does voluntarily give up basic human rights, dignity and any chance of ever liberating themselves or their offspring perennially.
As an engineer I can't really argue the legality of that.
As a human being I am duly enraged, most likely to no avail on their bottom line, the only nerve many corporations have.
I'd just like to mention that my Orange PI 5+ may lack significantly in the computational power department with its modest 8 ARM CPUs, but sports 32GB of soldered RAM at €250 for the entire board and thus a €50 premium over the 8GB models.
And 64GB of DDR4 SO-DIMM are around €110, €150 for DDR5. It's also less than €100/TB for PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSD these days, so clearly IMHO the term to apply to the fruity cult is
usory.
But I'm just an engineer.
As a consumer I chose clones even for the Apple ][. And then went with the PC because Apple was obviously bent on doing an Apple ][ MAX called the Apple /// on a top seller, just like Boeing these days (alternatively a dreamlining Lisa).
However, Microsoft again seems bent on copying whatever [extortion] innovation someone else comes up with and that's where I am converned and thus affected.
Perhaps they should
see PS/2 [
too] on what happened when IBM attempted to reign in what they believed something they somehow "
owned".