» Sun Jan 10, 2010 2:20 pm
When the same assembly processes were use for laptops as for desktops, just with smaller, lighter (and slower, mostly) internal components, they cost at least twice as much to manufacture as the equivalent desktop type PCs. In those days, desktops (branded, anyway) were mostly about $2000, and there really just weren't any laptops able to match performance at any price, but at almost $4000, you got fairly close.
A "cheap" laptop was still more expensive than an average branded desktop PC. The number of PCs being sold shot way up, however, and the average desktop's price began dropping, but not the laptops. There just wasn't much of any way to sell those cheaper when they were made the old way. However, by dispensing with many of the features offered by desktops, using an entirely different assembly procedure, it became possible to put newer laptops on the shelves at prices closer to those of desktops.
The least expensive are cheap in every way that the word is defined, however. All of them, for all practical purposes are now assembled with no "insides" still accessible, except the main memory, and the storage drive systems. The video they have cannot be changed. The CPU they have cannot be changed. They are chemically bonded, solidly welded into a monobloc structure. Because they are now comparatively less costly, desktops are only being bought by businesses. Everyone else buys laptops, unless they play a lot of games.
Game playing laptops still exist, but despite the new assembly procedures, will still cost $1600 to $2500 each, while game playing desktops for current games cost half of that.
Gorath