I certainly used to recommend my female flatmates get one, I told my sister to get one too and she's very happy with it. The funny thing with Macs is that people seem to want to portray the users as a bit clueless and while they're probably ideal for people who want minimal fuss and simply want a device that works they're also valued by quite a few hardcore techie types.
CPUs aren't "broadly the same", they're the exact same chips aren't they? Apple doesn't get bespoke Intel chips do they? But you can prove me wrong I don't really like researching Apple specifications because all the buzzwords/neurolinguistic mind control on their website just depresses me.
I mean the bespoke/proprietary hardware in a Mac is going to be outdated very quickly anyway. Anyone buying a new macbook 12 months after release is getting old tech.
If you have systems from several manufacturers, all with the same level of hardware, the Apple system is going to be more expensive by at least £400-£5000 (especially if you have extra options like ssds). If you think that level of premium is worth an extra 45 minutes of battery life and a cheap mass produced metal chassis, as well as having to put up with old hardware like outdated SSDs, then I just strongly disagree.
Umm "flying along" doesn't negate the fact that it's old hardware.
My 6 year old netbook "flies along".
honestly can't see past apple these days from a cost vs value point of view,
if you ignore the initial purchase cost and solely look at the value of the product then a MacBook is the better option over the medium to long term,
Unless it breaks.
know that one, just paid £460 for a new screen for my MacBook Pro at 22 months oldapple weren't interested as it wasn't bought direct from apple.
that said I still think overall they are fantastic value for money over a longer term of ownership.
just look at the price of old Mac Pro desktops,
workwise I tend to find our Macs are better for productivity resale value and "staff morale". no one gets excited about getting handed a boggo laptop by their employer, but going by our staff you hand them a shiny new MacBook Pro and thats a big deal
Well besides the desire for an employer to care about their employee, they can also join the frivolous and pointless rat race to show off their temporarily acquired wealth to their temporary friends/foes.
Truly a marvel this society.
from a complete cost of ownersship from a business perspective they are great cost effective bits of kit,
have a look at some of the Mac resellers and see what they are putting out second hand MacBooks for. £250 for a 8 yr old MacBook eek. reduced support costs over the whole life of the product and less downtime, granted W10 is a fans tacit stable OS and we very rarely have any issues but osx just works full stop no issues no faff. and the fact the guys in the office prefer the kit be it for bragging rights or shiny shiny apple loving keeps them happy.
I know its "cool" to dislike apple and I'm a pc man at heart, christ my personal desktop at work is my trusty old battered phantom thats been running the 4.8ghz 2600k for the last 7 years.
but for us the overall cost of apple products if you include productivity overall ownership cost and the benefits to staff morale make them far and away far better "value" than any other laptop manufacturer.
Honest truth is that £200 can buy you a laptop that will cover the majority of tasks done by non-specialist / gaming users.
Well besides the desire for an employer to care about their employee, they can also join the frivolous and pointless rat race to show off their temporarily acquired wealth to their temporary friends/foes.
Truly a marvel this society.
I agree with this. It is really annoying how many sales people over-sell to customers needs. I can understand why they do it, for sales, but its not honest and is purely a business practice NOT a computer persons practice.
Pointless looking at component cost for Apple products,that is not what you are paying for. You are paying for a complete package,including the OS. OSX is light years ahead of Windows,and Windows is dire for many professionals. I used to do the whole dual boot Windows + linux,but they is a royal pain, VM was better but slow. Why bother when you can get a proper OS and ZSH with a GUI that will run office and Adobe products when needed. My 2011 iMac27" is lighting fast,responsive and does everything I need in a compact form with a fantastic IPS screen. It probably cost the company 2K back in the day but I imagine at least 10 years of use out of it