On the bright side, if you sell the device someone else could upgrade the storage after the fact.
Once they figure out the counters to Apple’s tricks.
The teardown video also reveals that storage is modular in the new Mac mini, meaning that it can be easily removed since it is not soldered down. As we saw with the Mac Studio, however, replacing the modular storage is complicated.
Indeed, totally an Apple approach to modularity: it is a proprietary Apple SSD…
Apple decided they want memory modules that only contain memory because the storage controller is on their own silicon and they have direct low level access to the storage chips if they do it themselves. Probably cheaper (for them) without redundant controller parts they don’t need too.
Surprised nobody has reverse engineered this yet to make compatible upgrade modules. Probably not enough money in it.
I just got mine with 1TB. I added a second external SSD for a bit more space. Good enough for me. The only issue is that I can’t point the Dropbox app at the external drive. The new one has to point to the user home folder (guess I could move all of that to the external drive).
You could create a symbolic link, that would work.
I’ve heard it doesn’t due to Apple restrictions on the new operating systems for Apple silicon but I’ve never tried it myself.
And presumably if you switch the SSD yourself, you’ll brick the whole thing!
Ifixit accomplished it. Required another Mac to reinstall the OS.
I mean, if you’re swapping it for a drive with no OS on it, wouldn’t that make sense?
Older intel macs could do an internet recovery on a bare drive. The internet recovery system was part of the ROMs/BIOS.