Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 2, 2013 19:57:06 GMT -8
How can a rumor be promising? Until Apple validates its just a rumor.
|
|
Deleted
Deleted Member
Posts: 0
|
Post by Deleted on Jun 2, 2013 20:00:13 GMT -8
Clarification. Current-gen 21" iMacs have no way to install RAM post-purchase, but the 27" iMacs have a quite user-friendly RAM installation panel. Though yes, the RAM installation restriction isn't consumer-friendly and a step backward from the previous-gen smaller iMac. My first Mac was an LC-series. Thank God Steve Jobs came back. I have always upgraded RAM myself, until the Retina MBP. Frankly, the internals are so compact, I'm not sure I'd even be interested in trying that with the new slimline profile. But yeah, the RAM is user-upgradable in the 27 incher, not the 21 incher.
|
|
|
Post by sponge on Jun 2, 2013 20:33:46 GMT -8
How can a rumor be promising? Until Apple validates its just a rumor. When the NYT and WSJ get into reporting it is beyond rumors.
|
|
Mav
Member
[img style="max-width:100%;" alt=" " src="http://www.forumup.it/images/smiles/simo.gif"]
Posts: 10,784
|
Post by Mav on Jun 2, 2013 20:35:21 GMT -8
I can probably accept soldered RAM on an ultra-slimline laptop, albeit grudgingly.
I'm still very much a desktop user (except for my iPad/iPhone), so let's see what Apple does with the MacBook Air or the Retina MacBooks to change my mind. If Apple keeps around the "classic" MacBook Pros for one more generation and brings the CPU and GPU up to today's spec, there's that option too.
|
|