xp84 2 days ago

Having run a Mac Mini with a 256GB internal drive for 2-3 years I will dispute that anyone should buy base models for that reason. MacOS makes it as painful as possible for you to use external drives. For instance, no software for "cloud" drives (google drive, onedrive, icloud drive) is allowed to locate its local copy on an "External" drive, so you can't keep your files locally and in the cloud, have to pick one. Photos can have its library moved at least.

I like the hardware, hate the absurd greedy storage and RAM prices.

3
samtheprogram 2 days ago

> For instance, no software for "cloud" drives (google drive, onedrive, icloud drive) is allowed to locate its local copy on an "External" drive

Source? Is this self-imposed, or what does “allowed” mean?

Even if true, technical people can work around this by either spoofing a non-external drive or using `ln`, no?

xp84 1 hour ago

Try it yourself and see. Something about macOS cloud file provider system that they all use now has a built-in requirement that you must locate that “OneDrive” or “Google Drive” folder on an “internal” drive. Assuming you have a $6000 Mac Pro you can have as many internals as you want, but for the rest of us “internal drive” means the one single drive soldered directly to your motherboard.

Of course, predictably, iCloud Drive gives you no configuration of where you store the local copy, so it’s stored in some weird path specifically on your boot volume.

haiku2077 2 days ago

> Even if true, technical people can work around this by either spoofing a non-external drive or using `ln`, no?

IIRC Google Drive for Desktop won't sync the target of a symbolic link. It will sync the target of a hard link, but hard links can only target the same filesystem that the link is on, so you can't target an external drive on macOS AFAIK.

I can't speak for the other software you mentioned.

samtheprogram 18 hours ago

That… sucks. I’m going to play with this.

GeekyBear 2 days ago

The M4 Mini ships with 16 Gigs of RAM minimum and accepts third party SSD replacements.

xp84 2 days ago

Not SSDs. Weird little proprietary NAND modules that someone reverse-engineered and that Apple will hopefully not issue a software update to brick. The controller part of the SSD is in the CPU. For “reasons” I guess

GeekyBear 2 days ago

> The controller part of the SSD is in the CPU. For “reasons” I guess

Probably because Apple spent half a billion dollars for the patent portfolio of a company building enterprise SSD controllers a decade ago. People seem to like data storage integrity.

> Anobit appears to be applying a lot of signal processing techniques in addition to ECC to address the issue of NAND reliability and data retention. In its patents there are mentions of periodically refreshing cells whose voltages may have drifted, exploiting some of the behaviors of adjacent cells and generally trying to deal with the things that happen to NAND once it's been worn considerably.

Through all of these efforts, Anobit is promising significant improvements in NAND longevity and reliability.

https://www.anandtech.com/show/5258/apple-acquires-anobit-br...

xp84 1 hour ago

Is the implication here that non-Apple computers have SSDs that just constantly erase themselves or something? I don’t buy that this is a problem and I don’t buy that Apple has solved it. Even if they did solve it, having the fancy SSD controllers on the actual “SSDs” by using NVME is so obviously the only consumer friendly choice that it’s laughable to think Apple went to all this trouble for altruistic reasons. If Apple cared about keeping people’s data safe, instead of charging 300% margins on SSDs, they could charge much smaller margins annd give double the storage, and configure Macs by default with RAID.

If I had to place a bet on why the patents were purchased, it would be to protect them against someone else purchasing them and alleging that literally any SSD controller Apple put into their silicon was infringing.

paxys 2 days ago

AI FOMO at least made them bump the base RAM to 16GB. 256GB is pitiful but manageable if you don't need to handle large files. And jumping up to $800 just for another 256GB is absolutely not worth it.

xp84 2 days ago

I agree on your second point, which is why unless Apple ever moves away from only having 2010-era storage amounts and absurd prices to size up, from now on I'll be buying used only. Just picked up an M3 MacBook Air with 16GB and 1TB SSD, mint condition, for under a grand.