You see - there's a kind of people that care about benchmarks and throttling and there's a kind that actually use computers.
I won't advocate for Apple and I don't use their products on daily basis. But I admit they are very comfortable to use. You don't have to tinker much - everything is mostly plug&play and does everything for you.
I expect people on this forum to not like this approach, looking at so many here oppose Windows 10 auto updating. But why the aggression? Seriously?
Just a simple example: Apple computers actually choose the resolution and scaling for you, when you plug in a monitor. Compared to what's available on Linux and Windows, it's the only approach that really works. And monitors with sub-optimal dot size have been around for a decade.
But yeah... I'm sure some people will hate this idea just because it takes away some control over the OS, right?
And another example: eGPU. Few days ago some guy asked about an eGPU solution for his MacBook. I looked into it what Apple provides (in tandem with Blackmagic - a well known maker of solutions for video production). Honestly? Given all the problems eGPU cases make with Windows and Linux, IMO the Apple/Blackmagic solution is *by far* the best one. Again: plug&play, perfect compatibility (of course), good design, good built quality, everything over USB-C. This is how computers should look like in 2019.
Seriously, how can you even say that? Do you even track the notebook market?
Mainstream allround notebooks went thin, with things like ASUS Vivobook/Zenbook, MacBook Air and Dell XPS dominating their price brackets.
We're even seeing some thinner gaming laptops lately - a sign that gamers are getting fed up with thick, plasticky boxes.
Again: if CPU performance is all you care for, you won't get a MacBook anyway. And possibly none of the slim ultrabooks available.
These are not the kind of products you buy for raw oomph.
Yeah, if someone wants to be happy with his Apple products, he'll have to get used to the ecosystem. But it's not that bad in the end, because the ecosystem actually works.
I had an iPhone 5s for about 1.5 years. I didn't like many things: overheating, bad battery life in cold weather and so on. And since I only had the phone, it was a burden for things like file transfer.
I take a lot of photos using my phones and I didn't like the fact that I can't just copy them over network or USB cable. They have to be moved via their server (iCloud). But it really works. You just have to get over the initial mental block.
I really got used to the fact that I don't have to think about some things. I really liked the fact that photos appear on my PC (Windows) minutes after I get home.
I moved back to Android few months ago and I find myself not copying photos from the phone for days...