That's my whole point; No, more ports isn't more better. If you don't need them they're just more cost, more holes where water/debris can get into the machine, and more wrong holes to plug the charger into. If you do need them, then buy a machine that has them - there are plenty.
If youre in an office you can be expected to use a dock
Almost every laptop does have a dedicated HDMI port
Show me one architect that is actually dragging along two external 4k displays with their laptop.
If you are a professional with specific needs buy a specific laptop. Frankly there are more than enough laptops that have more ports if that's what you need. Except even in your example you don't even need more ports because you can just use the second USB4 port.
Please do! I think your design should fit my 6a perfectly.
Who even leaves voicemails anymore? If I don't reach somebody I just sent them a quick text why I called and whatever to call back.
Most devices only have 40gbps USB4. Which is still enough for almost all sane use cases. Frankly, if you need multiple 4K monitors get a desktop.
That's the most straw in a straw man I've seen in the whole thread.
Most new laptops have USB-C, A, and SD/micro SD, and HDMI. That's 95% of all uses.
If you really need more then you just bought the wrong laptop. Get a Thinkpad or framework 16. If you need to interface with old hardware, get a contemporary machine.
The Bright Creek? Sounds lovely!
Have you ever seen musk get to the point that concisely without stammering for half an hour?
This fucking timeline
I suppose they don't use their superlatives quite that inflationarily.
Probably that the US is No. 1 in paving straight over every available surface. And that they will move mountains to do it apparently.
Well that's certainly not the whole truth the way mine can be heard crushing on his dry food from multiple rooms way
The OS would crash entirely before that happens
Those bitflips are probably more likely to skip the section erroneously than waiting for the array to be sorted.
Well, what even is a "positive experience"? "Getting exactly what you paid for"? The service being "mostly reliable"? Those are basically neutral.