Since Big Sur (and to a certain extent Catalina) it's clear that the Mac is moving away from being a work machine suitable for professionals to create things into a toy for consumers to consume media on.
It started with these new "apps" such as Music, Videos and News which look unfinished given how empty they are (especially comparing to their iTunes predecessor), completely out of place (as some are just ports of iOS apps), and the few features that are in there have bugs or don't behave like you'd expect.
In Big Sur there appears to be a Stocks app, that somehow asks me to accept a privacy policy and tries to connect to Apple News behind the scenes (which I denied). Is it for people who are too stupid to look it up in the browser?
The Big Sur UI is also an absolute insult.
The constant nagging about iCloud is tiring, and that feature is outright dangerous for anyone working with confidential data. Did you know that having iCloud Drive enabled and opening a CSV file in Numbers will silently upload it to iCloud in the background?
I used to like Mac because the UX was nice and as long as you gave them their money, Apple seemed to respect you and get the fuck out of your way. I don't remember Mac OS being actively hostile against the user until the Catalina era where Apple transitioned to their services approach, but I can't see every buying into these services for 2 reasons:
1) they are still so behind the competition - see Apple Music vs Spotify, iCloud Drive vs OneDrive.
2) I don't want my data siloed into apps - I want the option to access it on the web
3) I don't want the auth to said service depend on the entire machine being logged in. You can't easily log into 2 iCloud accounts for example because it's not just a client app where you can run 2 instances, it's built into the system
Finally, if you get a Mac and install something like Little Snitch (a firewall) you'll be scared of how the machine is constantly pinging Apple about something.
I’m now conflicted. I’m not sure whether I’ll go ahead with my planned purchases and career change.
I believe in fixing things rather than walking away, but I think my agency as a developer (even if I worked directly for Apple) is limited. I probably hold far more power as a customer, and if past-Apple is indicative of future-Apple, it’ll be money that prompts them to reconsider decisions like these.
I’d happily move to working with other systems, I already run a dual-booting PC for some of my other work and quite like the idea of managing photos on my own server. Media like music and films is a harder issue as I’ve bought around £1500 worth of films on iTunes over the years and lost my music library when switching from iTunes Match to Apple Music. Another factor is that my family (parents, grandparents, etc) are all now used to FaceTime and asking them to use an open source alternative would be non-trivial.
All this to say “I’m not sure”. I don’t think they’ve done enough yet to warrant knee-jerk abandonment but I am watching closely, researching alternatives and holding off on any more investment (financial or education) in their ecosystem until I’m confident one way or the other.
However... some stuff just... is. For example:
- I have 2 USB-C ports, but only one of them can do external video.
- The USB drive can't provide enough power to my external HD, so I just don't use it.
- Sometimes my Bluetooth headphones don't connect, and the only reliable way to get them to work is to reboot.
- I'm on an external monitor 90% of the time, but about once a week the laptop doesn't wake the monitor and I can't get the laptop screen back on without hard rebooting.
- The dedicated GPU is nice for CUDA programming, but every time I try to use it the fans are so loud it disrupts the household.
- I only tried "GPU gaming" on it once, and the fans are louder than the speakers so the only way to do it is with headphones.
- The wrong keys were put on the laptop, e.g., "INS" does a print screen, "Pause" moves a page up, and so on. It all technically works but, ugh.
I won't need to replace the laptop for over a year from now, but that's about how long I like to do research on this type of stuff. I started considering a MBP, which is what I use for work, but I'm not totally sold. Between their snafu last year where an Apple server went down and nobody could open any desktop program at all, to the recent hard drive scanning/reporting technology they're rolling out, to their total disregard for standards such as removing basic ports, I think I might actually prefer the Galago problems.
I'm interested to hear details if anyone else has made a similar decision between laptops like the ones I am considering for my next purchase.
M1 MacBook Air is class-leading, and there is no Wintel equivalent of the 24” iMac.
There are plenty of imperfect elements within the Apple ecosystem, but hardware is not one of them.
iCloud (excluding third-party storage backend) is a complete ecosystem; a sufficient parity replacement would take a decade to commercialize.
If you want a sufficiently-decent Linux or FreeBSD hardware ecosystem, call the Qualcomms of the world to task for continuing to make self-service wireless drivers a PitA. Ubuntu remains the most widely-supported option.
As for desktop development, Linux is an embarrassment; Flutter is your only hope. Look and feel should never be second-class; shave your neck-beard and start taking the native presentation layer seriously.
I am happy with their timing because I would have otherwise bought an iPhone 13 and be really annoyed if they announced their spyware right after.
Other brands have seen Dell's success and have been making noises about Linux support as well, although with little actual substance, like no option to select the OS on their webshops. I'm looking at you, Lenovo.
Yes, you could make the argument that Big Corp already knows _way_ more about me than whatever new info apple would get, and that Big Corp already knows me _way_ better than I know myself (obv), but still...this seems too China-like.
Like Double XX Posse said -- not gonna be able to doot!
I will only purchase an Mx macbook if they get proper Liux support. I think the machines could be great but I am done with macOS. There are multiple worthwhile machines that could run Linux. (gamers are underrated and AMD works great with Linux so far)
As far as the smartphone goes, I'm stuck with the iPhone now as there are no alternatives. I was considering an iPad Pro but I am postponing that for now until this whole saga clears out.
I don't mind the invasion of privacy so much as the idea that, even after paying so much money, the device is still not really "yours".