this post was submitted on 10 Feb 2024
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Technology
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I can kind of get why the standardization sucks. Everything is so packed together in most designs, having standardized elements might limit a companies options for building something compact.
I do wonder how much extra bulk a bunch of standardized elements would actually add though. Like would the average person really mind the laptop body being half cm thicker?
The "average person" wants a laptop that's: cheap, unbreakable, lightweight, thin, high resolution, small, fast, and with a ton of battery. Suffice to say they're contradictory requirements.
The most "standardized" laptops, as in easier to find spare parts for, are from brands popular with businesses, like Lenovo or Dell ones.
I think it is about product differentiation and the cutting edge. Also Apple has historically defined the trends even for the non-Apple markets. Apple reaches for the next high end thing, then it filters to others after they prove it out. Similarly on the PC side one has to sell an idea to the brand's first. So design is heavily brand driven and hence custom. I use to work in the industry. You would not believe the pressure to drive out a mm of thickness, an ounce of weight, a watt of power.
So do customers care. I do not myself. More normal people, well they will buy what companies like Best Buy choose to sell and push though the size, weight, features, and design do matter presumably.
It’s a common issue in a lot of industries, where internal priorities and concerns end up having more influence on a companies decision making than actual consumer wants and needs. Why the idea of “the free market will optimize for the best products” kind of falls apart in reality so often.