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And you know, when a product is announced they've already made all the decisions and committed to them. Little late to be back seat driving or arm chair experting.
Fair enough. I mean even PC's have a hard limit as to how much uyou can upgrade.
The other 2 are soldered on the pcb.
And there's no "GPU and CPU" as separate entities. It's one chip, called an APU (what Intel CPUs with integrated graphics should technically be called). You're not going to be able to jam an RTX in there.
Every extra socket they build into the internals of the machine and have to support means more cost. And most people aren't in the market for an incomplete computer, so that's extra cost with no benefit to the majority of customers.
It's a plug and play computer, not advanced hardware. It checks boxes for people who want convenience. The ones who want to upgrade stuff, they can do that to their own PC.