
OMG! I love these! They wick perfectly with high VG juice. The taste is very clean. No gurgle or spitback. Absolutely no leaking whatsoever. And they vape just like Claptons, but they aren't. I can't believe nobody talked about these before. They beat out everything I have or have ever built, except for my FreeMax Mesh Pro. I just love them.
In California...unheard of!I renewed my driver's licence this morning. It required an eye test and new photo so I couldn't do it online. I was going to pass on the Real ID but took the necessary documents and got it anyway. I don't plan on boarding a plane anytime soon but would sure like to put the wife on one but she will need a passport as where I have in mind it not in the US. My arrival at the DMV was 40 minutes before my appointment and I departed 3 minutes after my appointment time, a total of 43 minutes. Unheard of.

What? I was reading the comments on a HP - Spectre x360 2-in-1 13.3 $1300 laptop. And one of the comments said the RAM is on the motherboard and there isn't any RAM slots. So buy the machine that comes with the RAM that you need. Why would they do that? Is this how they do it with speedy 3200 megahertz RAM systems? Are fast RAM desktops the same way?
https://www.bestbuy.com/site/hp-spe...tural-silver-aluminum-stamping-base/6376412.p
Right, you pretty much have to do that to make "Ultra book" sized laptops, and there are compelling reasons why people (myself included) appreciate a thinnest, lightest laptop they can find when they travel.That is becoming more and more common. In order to shrink the design of the laptop, in this case make it thinner, they need to remove the components that would otherwise take up space. Soldering RAM onto a motherboard takes up less space than allowing user replaceable RAM with the allowable sockets. CPU’s are also now soldered on.
Full sized desktops probably not. Smaller form factors, maybe.
Right, you pretty much have to do that to make "Ultra book" sized laptops, and there are compelling reasons why people (myself included) appreciate a thinnest, lightest laptop they can find when they travel.
But there's no compelling reason to shrink a desktop computer to the point where this becomes necessary, even a "Small Form Factor" one. Late last year, I replaced a bunch of 6-9 year old desktops with new SFFs. They're all a good bit smaller than the ones they replaced, but they all have four RAM slots and a socketed CPU. Most of the space savings has come from reducing the volume previously allocated for 3.5" HDDs and optical drives. 2.5" SSDs do not need much space and M2 NVME sticks need even less.