| yeah I get the benefits. And yeah the "repair" argument I agree, good luck finding a bad stick :) The real frustrating thing as for now in the real world is, there is an extremely low number of laptops with soldered ram that offers 64 GB. And the few that do, charge an absurd amount of money for it. With socketed ram, I can: - buy the cheapest built-in config of a laptop - then buy the RAM I currently need on my own, often saving a few hundreds bucks just doing that - then, in a few years, buy some new RAM again, when I need it, if I need it, instead of having to buy a whole new laptop. That's how I went with thinkpads during 15 years. Now I have to pay 500$ more to be a bit future proof. If the manufacturer offers it. Double that if you want a mac. So, still today, I'm 100% taking socketed ram instead of soldered one. |
How many concurrent VMs would I ever want to run anyway?
If I ever go over 16GB, and actually notice it swapping on an NVMe drive... why not just remote to a real workstation?