this post was submitted on 09 Nov 2023
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Ah, I see where some of the disconnect is. I'm comparing U.S. prices, where identical Apple hardware is significantly cheaper (that 15" Macbook Air starts at $1300 in the U.S., or £1058).
And I can't help but notice you've chosen a laptop with a worse screen (larger panel with lower resolution). Like I said, once you actually start looking at High DPI screens on laptops you'll find that Apple's prices are actually pretty cheap. 15 inch laptops with at least 2600 pixels of horizontal resolution generally start at higher prices. It's fair to say you don't need that kind of screen resolution, but the price for a device with those specs is going to be higher.
The CPU benchmarks on that laptop's CPU are also slightly behind the 15" Macbook Air, too, even held back by not having fans for managing thermals.
There's a huge market for new computers that have lower prices and lower performance than Apple's cheapest models. That doesn't mean that Apple's cheapest models are a bad price for what they are, as Dell and Lenovo have plenty of models that are roughly around Apple's price range, unless and until you start adding memory and storage. Thus, the backwards engineered pricing formula is that it's a pretty low price for the CPU/GPU, and a very high price for the Storage/Memory.
Well, that's becoming less common. Lots of motherboards are now relying on soldered RAM, and a few have started relying on soldered SSDs, too.
Yes, but you're not addressing my point that the price for the hardware isn't actually bad, and that people who complain would often just prefer to buy hardware with lower specs for a lower price.
The simple fact is that if you were to try to build a MacBook killer and try to compete on Apple's own turf by matching specs, you'd find that the entry level Apple devices are basically the same price as other laptops you could configure with similar specs, because Apple's baseline/entry level has a pretty powerful CPU/GPU and high resolution displays. So the appropriate response is not that they overcharge for what they give, but that they make choices that are more expensive for the consumer, which is a subtle difference that I've been trying to explain throughout this thread.
Why not? Half of the software I use is available on both Linux and MacOS, and frankly a substantial amount of what most people do is in browser anyway. If the software runs better on one device over another, that's a real world difference that can be measured. If you'd prefer to use Passmark or whatever other benchmark you'd like you use, you'll still see be able to compare specific CPUs.