![]() ![]() But I also find myself increasingly wondering whether that’s as sensible a view to take as it once was. I want to be able to increase my computer’s memory and storage capacities over time as I see fit. Now I - and, I suspect, most of you lot too - find this irritating. The Air’s memory is soldered onto the motherboard, leaving the Wi-Fi card and the SSD flash storage as the only readily removable components - and, as you’ll see, swapping out the SSD is a non-starter: it needs a special Apple cable to interface with the motherboard. I couldn’t just throw in the extra memory and storage myself. The reason I wanted to get hold of the upgraded version of the Air is, of course, because Apple’s mania for providing punters with sealed units containing "no user-serviceable parts within". ![]() Apple’s MacBook Air 13-inch: cutting-edge internals, behind-the-curve casing ![]()
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