I honestly don’t understand what people even like about Apple. They aren’t privacy focused at all. They still collect a lot of personalized data about you. And even if it’s not as much as google, still doesn’t make it good, just makes it less bad. And they store it securely somewhere on a “trust me bro” basis, promising to not tell anyone else.
Apart from that: Apple is trying everything to avoid you realizing that you’re using a computer. Personally, I find IT experts using apple computers to be contradictory of some sorts, because of apple’s attempt at hiding the actual computer from you.
I understand that having a 1kg metal frame in front of you feels great & premium, but that can’t seriously be one of the major selling points…
MacBook since Apple silicon have the best processors (performance, battery life, feature support) in any laptop. Software development is much more similar to Linux and local LLM just work with the best unified memory bandwidth of any other device (recent nvidia RTX Spark is shit compared to a MacBook M5 Max).
Apple is shit, with anticonsumer practices, but actually has the best hardware, ok software, wide support for long time and ok stability. It is not perfect, but better then windows laptops on hardware and software while being worse then Linux laptop in some use case and better in other use case.
That’s true. I have a MacBook as well (M1, gift from a couple of years ago) and I don’t use it. Okay it’s fast, but what I do on a laptop doesn’t need that power at all. Battery life is very valid (which is a problem with my old ThinkPad), but with Framework catching up, it’s less of an argument in the future.
And I honestly don’t feel much of a difference when using my MacBook compared to my ThinkPad in terms of performance (and my ThinkPad has 2 cores and 4 threads mind you), but I mostly just browse and do C programming (I know that there is a massive difference in power, I just don’t need it in day to day use). For everything that needs a lot power I use my desktop computer.
In the end it just comes down to priorities I suppose. For me personally, privacy has become one of the most important concerns because I think it’s fucked up how much companies are allowed to know about us individually, and I don’t want them to keep getting information about me.
No battery life, no ARM processor, no retina display, no broken glass design and no other gimmick I don’t really need can justify what they are doing, at least in my opinion. I‘d rather need to inconveniently charge my laptop every 2 hours because the battery is dead then to have some company know more about myself then I do.
I honestly don’t understand what people even like about Apple. They aren’t privacy focused at all. They still collect a lot of personalized data about you. And even if it’s not as much as google, still doesn’t make it good, just makes it less bad. And they store it securely somewhere on a “trust me bro” basis, promising to not tell anyone else.
Apart from that: Apple is trying everything to avoid you realizing that you’re using a computer. Personally, I find IT experts using apple computers to be contradictory of some sorts, because of apple’s attempt at hiding the actual computer from you.
I understand that having a 1kg metal frame in front of you feels great & premium, but that can’t seriously be one of the major selling points…
It’s not that I like Apple is that I feel like they are slightly less bad than Google and there are pretty much no other options in the US.
MacBook since Apple silicon have the best processors (performance, battery life, feature support) in any laptop. Software development is much more similar to Linux and local LLM just work with the best unified memory bandwidth of any other device (recent nvidia RTX Spark is shit compared to a MacBook M5 Max).
Apple is shit, with anticonsumer practices, but actually has the best hardware, ok software, wide support for long time and ok stability. It is not perfect, but better then windows laptops on hardware and software while being worse then Linux laptop in some use case and better in other use case.
That’s true. I have a MacBook as well (M1, gift from a couple of years ago) and I don’t use it. Okay it’s fast, but what I do on a laptop doesn’t need that power at all. Battery life is very valid (which is a problem with my old ThinkPad), but with Framework catching up, it’s less of an argument in the future.
And I honestly don’t feel much of a difference when using my MacBook compared to my ThinkPad in terms of performance (and my ThinkPad has 2 cores and 4 threads mind you), but I mostly just browse and do C programming (I know that there is a massive difference in power, I just don’t need it in day to day use). For everything that needs a lot power I use my desktop computer.
In the end it just comes down to priorities I suppose. For me personally, privacy has become one of the most important concerns because I think it’s fucked up how much companies are allowed to know about us individually, and I don’t want them to keep getting information about me.
No battery life, no ARM processor, no retina display, no broken glass design and no other gimmick I don’t really need can justify what they are doing, at least in my opinion. I‘d rather need to inconveniently charge my laptop every 2 hours because the battery is dead then to have some company know more about myself then I do.