Quote from: Systems Decoy on December 19, 2019, 21:16:22
The title does not really represent the content of the article. I would expect notebookcheck to be more articulate here. As for the question posed in the title, worse for whom? These changes don't affect their target audience, large corporations who buy these machines on three year leases with an adequate support plan, and have enough spare units on standby to mitigate the odd system that's sent out for repairs. There has been no evidence to suggest that reliability has taken a hit. For some random employee out in the field, a failed DC jack is no different than a failed USB C port, the laptop is going back to IT regardless.
I'm mostly talking about small businesses, or businesses that don't have upgrade cycles frequent enough for 2-3 year upgrades, or businesses that don't buy extended warranty coverage. Failed ports are failed ports, and it'll overall cost the company more to get the port fixed if it's on the mainboard. Sure, warranty coverage is great, but I'm sure there are some companies that would prefer to do repairs in-house. This is especially true for organizations that have data security policies which don't allow shipping their devices out to the manufacturer for repair.
Regarding reliability, the reliability of the ThinkPads themselves haven't exactly gone down, no. However, the chance of a problem cropping up before a year or two goes up as you add more complex components to the board. RAM can fail, WIFI cards can fail, GPUs can fail, etc. Ram and WLAN are fairly easy to swap in a few minutes, which means a failure only results in a small amount of downtime as mentioned. Being able to hand an employee their laptop back in a matter of minutes is crucial for some companies.
I understand that large companies on a contract are their main market, but there's a chance of alienating a number of their customers by making it impossible to replace any components.