Elegance and fixability have nothing to do with this thread. The OP clearly states that he believes using industrial adhesives shows lack of quality (before a mod changed the title). This is the point that I am making. I cannot see how one can come to the conclusion that using industrial adhesives equates to poor quality, unless the person coming up with this logic is the kind of person that spent their high school years trying to get high by sniffing paper glue and concluding that due to the distinct lack of a "high" and only being rewarded with a head ache, means that any adhesive = poor quality product for the job.
Don't misconstrue what I have said though. Nowhere in this thread have I postulated that not allowing the one component in a computer that is most prone to failure to be easily replaceable is a good design choice. I disagree with this direction that Apple is taking and it is bad for the consumer. I do get annoyed when I have to listen about "glue = bad quality" though.
However, I am easily able to fix the problem by ordering a Mac with a normal hard drive and then buying a rear shelf and a very fast external TB SSD to store the OS. The ergonomic issue regarding the iMac is a real one and hence why I am not planning to buy one. But again, that isn't the point of this discussion.
For example:
http://store.apple.com/uk/product/H...j2-256gb-2-x-128gb-ssd-thunderbolt-hard-drive