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by wtallis
14 days ago
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> Regardless of how thin you make it the thing will still be a massive rectangle that you can't flex or press on. There's very wide variation between laptops in how noticeably they'll flex or yield or creak when pressed. Laptops with a build quality that actually feels solid are far from being ubiquitous or even a majority. Doubling the thickness of my MacBook Air would probably make it regress on that solid feeling, unless the weight was also significantly increased. And regardless of whether current laptop form factors could accommodate a 2.5" drive, there's no use in doing so. That drive form factor is entirely obsolete for laptops and is just a waste of space and materials, and has been for about a decade. |
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I'm not sure why you seem to think that making something thicker would reduce the stiffness or strength. It's generally the opposite - see the concept of a torsion box. Anyway that wasn't the point. The point was that regardless of how thin you make the thing it will forever remain a cumbersome and delicate item that you have to treat with care when packing so what meaningful positive impact does shaving off those last few mm have? It's never made any sense to me.