- Aug 25, 2001
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Well, I figured I might as well be the one to bring this up. But it's been happening for a while. Apple really spearheaded it.
Now (last year or maybe two?), most entry-level devices (actually, "UltraBooks" too), have non-removable / upgradable / replaceable batteries. Which is bad for the environment. At least, some of those devices, may be able to be mfg'er-replaced, or possibly by third parties.
But even worse than that, now, is the rise of eMMC main storage that is soldered on. Non-removable, non-upgradable, non-replacable, and worse yet, non-destroyable and non-recoverable.
At least, some batteries, though internal and "non-replaceable" by users, might actually be able to replaced by a tech.
But eMMC, being likely BGA and soldered-on, is a much harder replacement, and likely not worth it, given the price of the device.
That makes these newer devices TRULY "disposable", which is sad. You would think that perhaps, just perhaps, these companies might have though of using some sort of socket for eMMC chips, like a PCGG (or whatever they've called?), that would allow replacement, or possibly even upgrades.
Yes, feel free to blame me too, for purchasing some of these (the $60 Winbook TW700 tablets, and an HP Stream 7). But I place the primary responsibility on the mfg's. At least, the back of the HP Stream 7 is removable (has to be, to access the microSD slot), and the battery pack looks like it could be replaced by a tech.
It seems bizarre, really, that the tech industry, with the rise of increasing amounts of "e-waste", are taking this path, just to save $2-5 a unit on their devices. I guess they decided to de-facto forcibly enforce "planned obsolescence", by creating devices that intentionally fail after a certain lifespan.
Or maybe eMMC wearout is not as big a factor as I think it is. I don't know if most eMMC is MLC or TLC. If it's MLC it may not be as big a factor, but the smaller sizes of it are still an issue.
Edit: Some workarounds, for internal battery failure, are getting one of those external Li-Ion / Li-Poly battery packs, with a 2.1A 5V output, which would work. I suppose if the device with eMMC, supports microSD/HC/XC, AND supports booting off of it (many may not), then you could always put Windows, or at least, some flavor of Linux on a bootable microSD card, and continue to use the device if the internal storage won't boot. (Speaking of recent x86 / Windows 8.1 tablets, I don't know enough about Android devices with eMMC, if their bootloader will allow booting Linux / Android off of a microSD.)
Edit: I downloaded and ran HDTune on my Winbook TW700. It reports a "Kingston S10016 (15GB)"
http://media.kingston.com/pdfs/emmc/eMMC_Product_flyer.pdf
It appears to be eMMC 5.0, which I believe is the newest standard, which is a good thing. It supposedly supports TRIM, and secure erase too, although I'm curious how you would send those commands to it. I don't believe eMMC shows up as a SATA interface, or perhaps it does. I'm not sure. (I'm talking hardware-level, not OS-level.)
Now (last year or maybe two?), most entry-level devices (actually, "UltraBooks" too), have non-removable / upgradable / replaceable batteries. Which is bad for the environment. At least, some of those devices, may be able to be mfg'er-replaced, or possibly by third parties.
But even worse than that, now, is the rise of eMMC main storage that is soldered on. Non-removable, non-upgradable, non-replacable, and worse yet, non-destroyable and non-recoverable.
At least, some batteries, though internal and "non-replaceable" by users, might actually be able to replaced by a tech.
But eMMC, being likely BGA and soldered-on, is a much harder replacement, and likely not worth it, given the price of the device.
That makes these newer devices TRULY "disposable", which is sad. You would think that perhaps, just perhaps, these companies might have though of using some sort of socket for eMMC chips, like a PCGG (or whatever they've called?), that would allow replacement, or possibly even upgrades.
Yes, feel free to blame me too, for purchasing some of these (the $60 Winbook TW700 tablets, and an HP Stream 7). But I place the primary responsibility on the mfg's. At least, the back of the HP Stream 7 is removable (has to be, to access the microSD slot), and the battery pack looks like it could be replaced by a tech.
It seems bizarre, really, that the tech industry, with the rise of increasing amounts of "e-waste", are taking this path, just to save $2-5 a unit on their devices. I guess they decided to de-facto forcibly enforce "planned obsolescence", by creating devices that intentionally fail after a certain lifespan.
Or maybe eMMC wearout is not as big a factor as I think it is. I don't know if most eMMC is MLC or TLC. If it's MLC it may not be as big a factor, but the smaller sizes of it are still an issue.
Edit: Some workarounds, for internal battery failure, are getting one of those external Li-Ion / Li-Poly battery packs, with a 2.1A 5V output, which would work. I suppose if the device with eMMC, supports microSD/HC/XC, AND supports booting off of it (many may not), then you could always put Windows, or at least, some flavor of Linux on a bootable microSD card, and continue to use the device if the internal storage won't boot. (Speaking of recent x86 / Windows 8.1 tablets, I don't know enough about Android devices with eMMC, if their bootloader will allow booting Linux / Android off of a microSD.)
Edit: I downloaded and ran HDTune on my Winbook TW700. It reports a "Kingston S10016 (15GB)"
http://media.kingston.com/pdfs/emmc/eMMC_Product_flyer.pdf
It appears to be eMMC 5.0, which I believe is the newest standard, which is a good thing. It supposedly supports TRIM, and secure erase too, although I'm curious how you would send those commands to it. I don't believe eMMC shows up as a SATA interface, or perhaps it does. I'm not sure. (I'm talking hardware-level, not OS-level.)
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