>>42471766
It feels like physically modding consumer electronics has fallen off whatever popularity it had, e.g. think of those 7th gen gaming console/gamepad mods. Post more of pony-blessed tech if you've got 'em.
I personally replace my tech on a ~yearly cycle, selling one thing to buy a newer one used, maybe to avoid losing too much money, but I've been like this for as long as I can remember. The most I've done so far is putting a pony sticker on Framework 13, since I'm likely to keep the exterior of this laptop and just replace the motherboard once every few years, so I won't have to say farewell to the pone for the foreseeable future. If I had to mod something beyond applying a sticker, it would probably have to be something with little technological progress likely to be achieved in ~5 years (=> no incentive to replace it in that timeframe). You know that feeling?
>inb4 anon starts a mail-in pony laser engraving business, for anons to send their powerbanks and stuff
I suppose it's easier when your flavor of autism isn't modern technology, but rather something that doesn't go out of date so often, say, clothes/instruments/whatever else people own and obsess about. Yes I know tech obsolescence and one's reactions to it are a long topic to discuss, my stance currently means giving up librebooted X220 and N900 with postmarketos for daily computing, lovely machines as they were. There is something beautiful about using a piece of hardware for a long time.

Anyway, would you rather put your favorite pony on everything you've got, or would you try to find a pony most relevant to each piece of tech? I still don't have a clearly favorite pony - they're all lovely! - so I would do the latter.