April 20, 2024
Teardown Reveals New Entry-Level iMac Has Soldered Memory That Can't Be Upgraded

Teardown Reveals New Entry-Level iMac Has Soldered Memory That Can't Be Upgraded

Posted June 19, 2014 at 2:57pm by iClarified
A teardown of the new entry-level iMac by OWC reveals that the desktop has soldered memory which can't be upgraded.

Now that we’ve had time to teardown the new iMac, unlike the $1,299 iMac, we found this iMac has the memory soldered to the motherboard removing any possibility of adding additional memory. Users will be permanently locked in to the 8GB of memory, as there is no Apple factory upgrade option.

The new iMac costs $1099, $200 less than the previous entry-level iMac. It features a 1.4GHz Dual-Core i5 processor, a HD 5000 Graphics card and a 500GB hard drive.


Check out some teardown photos below or hit the link for more...

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Teardown Reveals New Entry-Level iMac Has Soldered Memory That Can't Be Upgraded

Teardown Reveals New Entry-Level iMac Has Soldered Memory That Can't Be Upgraded


Teardown Reveals New Entry-Level iMac Has Soldered Memory That Can't Be Upgraded

Teardown Reveals New Entry-Level iMac Has Soldered Memory That Can't Be Upgraded

Teardown Reveals New Entry-Level iMac Has Soldered Memory That Can't Be Upgraded
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Comments (10)
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Pete
Pete - June 20, 2014 at 7:10am
I love Apple products and have many, but I'd hoped we'd moved on from integrated memory in computers. I wonder what the memory fail rate is? It must be pretty darn low. I can't remember the last time I had a fault module myself. Potentially have they've made this less eco friendly by making it more disposable? Lets hope the boards are relatively cheap to replace in the future. My dislike is upgradability and longevity. If it were 16Gb or maybe 12 then that's acceptable, but to be stuck on 8Gb for a modern premium computer is very poor show IMHO.
Geekoid
Geekoid - June 20, 2014 at 1:22am
Kamatis, have you ever owned a Mac? Your name means "tomato", interestingly enough.
Jake
Jake - June 19, 2014 at 3:51pm
Apple loves to say they're working to improve the environment. Releasing computers that can't have their RAM upgraded and forcing users to buy a new unit isn't doing that!
gamerscul9870
gamerscul9870 - June 19, 2014 at 4:32pm
When they mean environment they mean the waste that can damage it. When did it mean for users?
Jake
Jake - June 19, 2014 at 5:42pm
Buying new computers = throwing away old one = waste to environment
gamerscul9870
gamerscul9870 - June 19, 2014 at 5:46pm
Ahem, recycling computers nowadays.
Diggy
Diggy - June 19, 2014 at 3:03pm
That is bloody ridiculous that any company would do that in today's technological age! Absolutely wrong. Oh Apple... Your days of Jobs innovation are gone... R.i.p Apple and Steve
gamerscul9870
gamerscul9870 - June 19, 2014 at 3:21pm
And our days of trusting what one says were gone after jobs. Why upgrade when you can buy old macs with better performance and such but at the same time this ones cheap.
gamerscul9870
gamerscul9870 - June 19, 2014 at 3:34pm
And by people we don't trust I mean you. Just because the parts can't be removed means nothing, why does it matter if macs dominated PC nowadays, besides Yosemite is what makes performance better.
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