• theparadox@lemmy.world
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    30 days ago

    Just in time for RAM, SSD, and HDD prices to skyrocket and make personal computers unaffordable.

    I guess if you can afford one now, at least you’ll be able to repair it.

    • Corngood@lemmy.ml
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      30 days ago

      When buying a laptop in 2026, you really need to consider how easy it’s going to be to keep it running with parts you’ve scavenged from other road-warriors.

    • davel@lemmy.ml
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      30 days ago

      You could buy an anemic one now, and then upgrade the RAM & storage once prices come down.

    • HugeNerd@lemmy.ca
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      29 days ago

      Oh stop it. Plenty of used computers are perfectly fine. There isn’t a single thing you need done that can’t be done with a 15 year old PC. You don’t need “agentic AI” to generate horse slop in your home, you don’t need terabytes of pirated content you can’t watch anyway, you don’t need video games.

      We live in the golden era of thrifting PCs and disconnecting from the slop and nonsense of modern computing.

      • theparadox@lemmy.world
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        29 days ago

        My apologies! I didn’t realize you were the arbiter of what I do and don’t need. I feel so relieved now that I can just ignore all of the demands on my life and just hand over such authority to some opinionated jackass I met on lemmy.

  • skuzz@discuss.tchncs.de
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    30 days ago

    And yet still not as serviceable/durable as older ThinkPads. They don’t even have water spouts in the keyboard/chassis like the older ones. One could dump a beverage on the keyboard on the older models and it would route through the keyboard->chassis->even the docks had water routing ports so it would just keep traveling mostly harmless through to underneath.

    Nor batteries externally removable like used to be.

    Not a bad step though by any means, and great to see this return to user-serviceability.

    Props though, on the removable RAM. Given the need for shorter circuit paths for higher performance RAM these days, that looks a bit of clever engineering.

    • TheTechnician27@lemmy.world
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      29 days ago

      Nor batteries externally removable like used to be.

      This would be a major sacrifice to form factor and would be strictly detrimental to 99.999% of users. Regarding benefits outside repairability, basically nobody in 2026 is going to think to carry around a second, fully-charged laptop battery. Regarding repairability, you might have to replace the battery once during the laptop’s lifespan, and the procedure is extremely straightforward.

      With an external battery, you end up with a laptop that’s not only substantially thicker, but which – because it’s stuck with a large battery either on the back or on the bottom – likely has worse airflow.

      Notably for this repair, there are seven captive Phillips-head screws (seen plenty of hexalobular etc.), you can just use your fingers to remove the base cover (seen plenty where you need/want a pry tool), removing the base cover already removes the battery’s screw(s), and most importantly, you just pinch to disconnect instead of lifting a fragile connector off the board. Swapping the replacement external battery once you have it is probably about 30 seconds; this is about five minutes – practically no difference accounting for how infrequently it’ll need to be done. There’s an exception for people with a physical disability like Parkinson’s, but if you can phone a friend, the process is straightforward enough for basically anyone else to do it on your behalf.


      Edit: On a whim, I decided to look to Framework for a comparison. It’s worse there for battery replacement.

      • You have to first undo five captive hexalobular screws on the bottom.
      • Then you have to lift the magnetic top panel, being sure not to damage the ribbon cable while you disconnect it.
      • You have to pull out the connector for the battery using a small, black flap.
      • Then you unscrew three more captive hexalobular screws.

      As far as I can tell, the T14 is the easiest battery replacement you’re going to find being sold today. If you’re able-bodied enough to use a screwdriver and it not being external is somehow still a serious concern for repairability, I don’t know what to tell you.

    • recklessengagement@lemmy.world
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      29 days ago

      I fix lenovos on a pretty regular basis and still see water spouts on some models (assuming you’re referring to the plastic coverings over components), primarily the T-series

  • Rollade@lemmy.ml
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    30 days ago

    I mean I never had any issues with ThinkPad repairs ever, I think you still get parts for like real dinosaurs.

  • coltn@lemmy.ml
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    29 days ago

    hell ya for being able to buy these used as office surplus in 5 or so years

  • HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml
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    29 days ago

    First time I’ve seen CAMM memory in a real product. Pretty cool, but not sure if I prefer it to traditional DIMM slots though.

    But the removable ports are a fucking godsend. So sick of a broken port making an entire motherboard unusable.

    Honestly the only thing more I can ask for is for the battery to be on the outside of the case (like old school laptops) so you can replace it without opening it which not everyone is comfortable with doing. Otherwise this is really good. The only thing stopping me from buying this laptop is the fact that my current 6 year old Lenovo still works perfectly after I replaced the battery (honestly Thinkpads have always been pretty repairable, this is going above and beyond).

  • dosse91@lemmy.trippy.pizza
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    30 days ago

    I have the previous gen T14, and I had to replace the entire motherboard because the Wi-Fi chip is soldered. It’s still soldered on this one I see.

    • paper_moon@lemmy.world
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      29 days ago

      Huh, I feel better about my recent Latitude 5450 purchase then, damn. I didn’t realize we were soldering on WiFi chips now too. (In addition to ram soldering thats been going on for a while now)

  • anachronist@midwest.social
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    30 days ago

    I once bought a HP Elitebook on the basis of a very good repairability score from iFixit. It was a shit laptop but the big problem was that as it started breaking I found it impossible to find parts for it. It doesn’t matter if it’s held together by torx screws with no glue if you can’t actually get any parts.

    • Chronographs@lemmy.zip
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      30 days ago

      That’s surprising but so least Lenovo sells parts directly so you can skip eBay (though probably more expensive ofc)

      • methodicalaspect@midwest.social
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        30 days ago

        Occasionally it’s cheaper to buy a second Lenovo laptop on eBay than it is to buy a replacement part…also from eBay. Found this out with mine recently: mainboard was bad, equivalent board was $500, identical laptop with damaged chassis was $300. Bought the second laptop and swapped the mainboard into the good chassis, but now I also have spare a WiFi card, DIMM, keyboard, touchpad, battery, and screen. I’d call that a win.

    • cone_zombie@lemmy.ml
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      29 days ago

      I had an HP laptop at work where the keyboard went haywire. I saw a replacement keyboard online and thought “hey, why not, I’ll just replace it”. I didn’t even look up any videos or anything because I’d never think there would be a problem. So after needing to disassemble everything to get to the front plate, I was very happy to find out that the keyboard is riveted to it (about 20 or so rivets). I looked up a video and they suggested drilling out every rivet and then replacing them. I had never been so frustrated with a piece of technology before. Luckily, a can of contact cleaner solved the problem