I have to say how funny it is, that pro Intel posts in this thread focus more on AMD, than those of supposed fanboys.
Meanwhile ignoring the elephant in the room that is, THE RISE of ARM.
Will you address the point? The industry moving away from Intel's x86, with advanced semiconductor foundries (TSMC/Samsung) to facilitate the transition or will you continue to focus on AMD.
ARM is largely irrelevant for Windows users right now, and in my experience it would take a really significant performance disparity for hardware to drive software. This is the thing people on these sites don't get, hardware is not really the driver unless it is revolutionary. M1 is good, but not revolutionary.
For myself as example, there's no choice. The tools I use simply aren't there in the Mac ecosystem. In my case I'm talking about things you probably haven't heard of, FactoryTalk Studio, RSLinx, RSLogix. For others, MatLab, IIS, SQL Server, and so on. The software I run on my PC is worth literally 30X what my PC cost. That's not abnormal.
I am not saying there isn't a hardware performance delta where people would start switching, there is. I hyar don't think there is anywhere near enough of that disparity at this point. I think it would need at least 50% and really 100%+.
If you look at the example below, a 4+4 M1 vs the latest 4C TGL-H (35W) which will be the closest x86 competitor, the single core scores are not that much different. Yes the M1 is much better on power usage, but it is also on 5nm TSMC vs the 10nm Intel (Equivalent to 7nm TSMC).
It would also need to be more than just thin-and-light laptop space with max 16GB RAM. That memory number is pretty much useless to me, there's a reason I have 32GB and it's called VMWare and Hyper-V.
Theoretically a 6 core 35-45W TGL-H should hit north of 8000 on multi-core, which would best the M1. The single core scores are less than 7% apart. That would be a more fair comparison 6C vs 4+4.
This is not the type of thing that would drive people to switch operating systems, software, and so on.
There's also an entire ecosystem built around x86.
AMD and Intel sell chips. Apple sells computers.
Point being, you probably won't see
this <-- link from an Apple partner anytime soon. You're not going to see CAT scanners or MRI scanners using Apple chips, you won't see self-driving cars or trucks (Intel is big into this), nor industrial controllers, nor 5G routing controllers (again, Intel is there).
You'll just see Apple MacOS laptops and desktops. Apple would need to significantly expand the use cases for the M1 line and allow new types of integrations and uses from 3rd parties.
I don't see that happening.