If capitalism with that zest neoliberalism isn't, today, the only viable economic system then what is the alternative? We all have seen what a total failure the USSR was and what happens when the individual has no responsibilities and when the government tries to control your life. A total and utter failure fueled with corruption, total lack of responsibilities, and paying colossal taxes, which kind of drives home my point that your ideas of "we all coming together" (I don't know what you mean by we...) to fix our problems isn't a realistic and working view of the world.
Sorry, but your failure of imagination is not my responsibility. And you just keep playing out the exact rhetorical and logical mechanisms Fisher describes. It's uncanny, really. Pointing backwards to failed attempts in specific sociohistorical-cultural contexts and pretending that they are universally applicable; pretending that coming up with new ideas and solutions is impossible. None of this is true. I could absolutely go into specific detail as to why the USSR economic system failed (in short: corruption, though it's far more complex than just that, and ties directly into when and where it came to pass), but that's way beyond the point here. The point is: I'm suggesting alternative ways forward, and your response is a myopic, locked-down "no, that's impossible, because that's not how we currently do things". Your failure of imagination is on you, not me. It has been imprinted on you by the dominant ideology in the society that you live in, but it is nonetheless entirely possible for you to break those destructive and fatalist patterns of thinking.
The only point I can really agree on is that storage isn't going to be upgradable, but having in mind that backup drives and USB4/TB4 are so fast now system storage drive does not need to be upgradable because for mass storage and backups you would use external drives. I just don't see what really warrants nowadays in 2022 upgradable OS storage. You point out thermal stress but have you seen is that really true? If the controller is in the CPU anyway I don't think it will run that hot because the CPU will be cooled anyway, just as Apple Silicon is running x8 times more efficiently than Intel/AMD counterparts.
Backups? Where did I mention backups? I said data recovery. Good luck restoring data from on-package flash when a hardware failure occurs ...
And yes, everyone loves being dependent on external storage devices dangling off their laptops at all times, that's such a great solution. It's also rather interesting that you entirely failed to address the largest concern by far here: packaging area. Again: how would you propose fitting, say, 1TB of flash with a wide enough interface for it to be fast onto a CPU/SoC package without that package becoming
massive and thus ridiculously expensive?
Again: there are
major drawbacks to on-package storage, and essentially zero advantages. Even in the predatory neoliberal late-stage capitalist hellscape we are currently heading towards (and partly living in), where does it make sense for companies to spend tons of money integrating storage onto packages when there are no benefits to this?
Again you're broadly and subjectively saying things that aren't true. Tell me, if all is true what you say then why is it not the case now?
Because global politics is a complete f*****g mess, and there are few organizations or bodies capable of enacting something like this on a sufficient scale for it to work well. Thankfully the EU has been working towards being such a global actor, though as with all politics, these things take a lot of time.
Why aren't we making today the relevant efforts to bring beautiful Earth-loving changes?
There are a lot of people trying to do so. But they are up against massively wealthy corporations with extremely powerful lobbyists in extremely important parts of the world (the US in particular, where corporate lobbying is completely out of control, but it's not much better elsewhere). This means that even when there is
overwhelming evidence for why something would be near-universally beneficial, it often doesn't get implemented if some major corporate actor objects to it. Just look at how many decades it has taken to fight tobacco companies! It was widely known that smoking tobacco causes lung cancer in, what, the 1960s? 50s? Something like that. Yet it took 3-4 decades to even get tobacco companies to admit this, let alone get them to take any kind of responsibility for pushing their poison on people. E-waste is a far, far newer problem than tobacco.
It's all "if" with you. But that's okay. IF we all come together as people we could end all wars, poverty, and hunger but that is an IF and this is not how things work out obviously and have never ever worked in human history neither. So your points are just IF-talk and nothing more.
You know, it would be nice if you could refrain from the ridiculous infantilization and plain-faced bad-faith "arguments" here. Framing this as if what I'm proposing is some utopian pie-in-the-sky idea that could never be put into practice is just plain-faced not true - you're just operating as if the current way of the world is some sort of natural base order, rather than an ideological construction that has been built by large-scale concerted efforts over decades or even centuries. If an effort even .1% of that spent for the past 50 years in shoring up corporate profits and entrenching the political power of corporations was spent on fixing E-waste, this would be solved in a few decades. Entirely. Seriously, you need to take your blinders off and accept that the way things work today is not only deeply flawed, but
not the only way things can work. This isn't the gargantuan undertaking you're making it out to be. It would take time, money, and a lot of effort, but it's entirely doable - but it isn't doable if all you're focused on is "but shareholders need to get richer!" When you're starting from that premise, you've already given up on
so much of what is possible in the world.
If profits are low then that directly affects wages, company expenses, and even employment. So what is your point?
No. That is not a necessary causal relation. That is a causal relation within a specific subset of capitalist systems, in which profits are treated as a more important goal than providing employment, making good products, or fulfilling a useful function in society. I do not subscribe to this antidemocratic, harmful extremist belief, and thus do not agree that low profits necessarily directly affect wages. As I've said: you can have
zero profits and still have a stable business. Stable business means no growth, but no losses either. No cutting of wages, no cutting of production, but no major investments (that aren't funded by grants or loans) either. In a system that isn't dead-set on maintaining the ridiculous, anti-scientific idea of infinite growth, this would not be problematic whatsoever.
For building your own computer system that is okay or for upgradable servers I would assume to elongate the life of server infrastructures but that use case scenarios are highly industrialized and I would agree to that. I do build my own rigs and I like it. But there is a broader argument to be made with devices such IoT devices and all the mobile devices such as phones, tablets, and ultrabooks all would benefit from a complete SoC.
To some extent, yes. As I've said before, I agree that there's a general trend towards integration, and I think we'll see more on-package memory in the future. (I also hope that means we'll see more two-tier memory setups, with both on- and off-package memory in the same system - but that would need low level OS support, of course.) But I do not believe we'll ever see flash storage on-package for anything but the most extremely compact microcontroller-like implementations. Smartphones stack RAM, but have off-package storage. As do IoT devices (except those that make do with some tiny amount of on-die storage). It just doesn't make sense to integrate this.
The M1 has unified memory, what are you saying?!?
They're talking about storage. The M1 integrates the controller, but keeps the flash off-package, as putting flash on the SoC package
just makes no sense.
This isn't entirely true. No company has a long-term plan of functioning without profits. What you're talking about are just short-term strategies to make ends meet. Would be good to give examples.
Essentially every software/service startup operates this way. Twitter, Uber, Twitch, there are dozens and dozens of examples. Most of them never make any money whatsoever. Facebook operated like this for years until they built up their ad sales, hemorrhaging investor money. Twitter has been doing this to this day, living off investor money granted to them based on stock valuations and vague profits of "at some point we'll figure out how to make money off of this". But you know the real kicker here? Their problem isn't profits - their problem is that
they don't have a revenue stream. Again: revenue is what you base things on. Profits are what is left over when you've paid your expenses. Failed businesses don't fail because they're not profitable - that's just a figure of speech, mainly - they fail because they have
insufficient revenue.