• Nvidia and Micron are making emotional appeals to consumers while PC users express frustration with big AI companies’ practices and self-serving motives.
  • Memory vendors predict DRAM and SSD shortages lasting until mid-2027, while new tariffs on advanced computing chips and potential Steam Machine pricing over $1,000 add to consumer concerns.
  • The article highlights how corporations use emotional messaging to mask financial interests, advising consumers to remain skeptical of such appeals.
  • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    The good thing is that we have a few giants with vested interests in resisting that. PC OEMs like Dell and HP, Clevo, Intel/AMD who still have huge consumer sales, and the big one:

    Apple.

    Apple is all-in on personal compute, and they have the muscle to resist the anticompetitive plays, hopefully.

    • Nanowith@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      Apple can make Chrome book equivalents, they want you to rent compute power not computers.

      Natively you’d be able to run VLC on a good day if you’re lucky, but everything else will be online with a subscription attached.

      • brucethemoose@lemmy.world
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        3 days ago

        Apple likes being able to distribute apps and have users pay subscriptions to run them locally. This is what they already do; even 3rd party apps get a cut to Apple.

        And its why iPhones are so powerful, other than their meager RAM capacity.

    • ebolapie@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Tangential, but ironically the only used laptops (e: for repair) you can buy right now that haven’t been gutted for RAM and NVME are macbooks and similar that have everything soldered onto the motherboard.