Submitted by ME5SENGER_24 t3_122q3dr in BuyItForLife
Doughymidget t1_jds1deo wrote
Reply to comment by Patient_Fox_6594 in My Aunt’s GE Spacemaker Coffeemaker from 1988, used nearly everyday since by ME5SENGER_24
Cheaper than pushing it in?
Patient_Fox_6594 t1_jds1nt1 wrote
Cheaper than soldering in SO-DIMM or whatever slots and placing the memory in, and designing the board to take the stress of pushing it in. Soldering them in is easier to automate, I'd think, just slap slap slap slap slap plop.
Doughymidget t1_jds6trt wrote
Ah. I see.
intermediatetransit t1_jds2zj6 wrote
I would say so, yes. I mean I hate MacBooks personally and the way they no longer support most pc standards, but I have no problems coming up with justifications for their choices beyond ”planned obsolence”.
For instance if the memory is all soldered on there is a lot less to test for, i.e. the device only has a small set of memory sizes and maintaining quality and consistency with those is easier. You also no longer have to provide support for your customers shoving shoddy memory into the device and contacting support when it doesn’t work properly.
Doughymidget t1_jds86bt wrote
Sure. And every decision is made with multiple factors for and against it. Just having one reason to do something doesn’t mean that another reason couldn’t still be seen as a positive by a company. Again, there is hard proof that it’s been done before, and I don’t think that companies focus on this as a business strategy. But, I think it does exist.
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