A lot of newer laptops only take M2 drives.There isn’t option for internal hd in the construction of the laptop, only m2 SSD appears as a storage option. Just me having this problem?
A lot of newer laptops only take M2 drives.
Most new laptops are so thin they don’t have space for an HDD, and they only take m2’s. It’s just modernisation, the same way they phased out cd drives.Hello, thank you for support. Do you know why? Because that same model of laptop had an internal hd option a few months ago. I cannot see any acceptable reason to remove this option, all other big companies work with internal HD on their new laptop models.
Most new laptops are so thin they don’t have space for an HDD, and they only take m2’s. It’s just modernisation, the same way they phased out cd drives.
There’s no current performance gaming laptops that have space for HDD, they all use m2 drives, it’s standard these days.the difference in values between the two storage systems is huge to remove the hd so drastically. forces the consumer to spend 200 to 300 more buckets to have a good amount of storage. it still doesn't make sense to me since other brands use hd in their new laptops but its fine. thank you for attention
the difference in values between the two storage systems is huge to remove the hd so drastically. forces the consumer to spend 200 to 300 more buckets to have a good amount of storage. it still doesn't make sense to me since other brands use hd in their new laptops but its fine. thank you for attention
That's not accurate, the Alienwares only allow for M2's, the same with MSI's and all the rest. I'm talking about current gen chassis, with 10gen Intel or AMD 4000's, not older models that are still being sold on 3rd party sites like amazon.All new Alienware laptops "gamers" models, msi, rog, have internal hard drives and as I said the Defiance VII model had HD SATA as a storage option a few months ago.
If you want a thin and light laptop, and that's what the market does seem to want, then that precludes a heavy and bulky HDD. Hard disks are 'cheap' storage, but you pay a very large size and weight penalty, as well as a performance penalty, for that cheapness. They make sense in a desktop for backup, archive, or for data that doesn't benefit from the speed of an SSD (like videos and music) but the entire design ethos of a laptop is thin, light, and portable. With large capacity and fast M.2 drives now very affordable in high-end and gaming laptops it makes no sense to weigh them down with an HDD.