Jaros, this will give you an idea of what ISNT inside your laptop, and how the battery is fitted. It is a shame.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OB1c9EVswX8
My desktop I am currently on is 10yrs old and performs quite well, there isnt any reason to 'upgrade' and if components fail I can replace them up to a board fail.
Total cost for my Ultra Small Form Factor Dell Optiplex 745 -
$10 For the Dell
$2 bios battery
$19 Logitech wireless keyboard and mouse
While we are a "throw away" Society in development, some of us can choose where to save coin when we can.
I have purchased $35k servers, and replaced them just 2yrs down the line - that is a business need.
But for home I can happily cruise with an older machine, and gratefully use software provided by much smarter and generous people
than myself - I happily give $ support to their various projects.
I think that we are at a point that hardware just does not need to advance so fast for the Home User 'Joe Monkey', and that manufacturers and software engineers
need to 'invent' a reason for Joe Monkey to spend bananas and upgrade. Some would call that a "False Flag" scenario....
Batteries and things that are internal but non serviceable by end users is the start, Apple have that down to a fine art at component level.
I just cant bring myself to be ok with the chance that I may have to replace a $1300 laptop every 5yrs because of a battery fail,
as sweet as they look and as well as they may perform - 95% of people just have them plugged in on a desk at home, never to move.
Horses for courses, as I said in an earlier post.
I shun both MS and Apple, but have a foot in every camp, along with Mint that means 3 camps - I'm like 'Jake the Peg'. LOL
layful: