Recently, I decided it was time for an update. I use Linux on the often so it was important for me to purchase a laptop that was compatible.
I bought 2 laptops, all of which I had to return in the last 2 months.
1. Dell XPS: I spent over 20+ hours with their support going back and forth. I also had a tech come to my house to replace my motherboard before I gave up and demanded a return
2. Lenovo Carbon X1: The laptop came with a faulty keyboard so I just returned it because I didn't want to wait 30 days for a mail-in repair or drive 2 hours to go to a "local" repair shop. They also made me order the laptop 3 times because their system kept cancelling it for whatever reason so it took an insane amount of time to just purchase the laptop (I spent ~6 hours to just purchase the laptop)
Maybe I'm just unlucky but the time I spent and energy I spent to just purchase these laptops shows you why people buy from Apple instead. I strongly dislike MacOS because they force the "apple way" of doing things. But it seems to be the only option these days to buy a computer with ease and get a computer "that just works". My Macbook was more expensive but the time I saved outweighs the price imo.
Steve jobs famously said "The only problem with Microsoft is they just have no taste.", and this seems true to me for almost all hardware manufacturers, and to a larger degree still for software.
Why does nobody care about creaking plastic? About sticky-feeling texture? About uneven weight distribution? About the sound that materials make when handling them? About flickering in software? About inconsistent spacing? About janky color combinations?
There has been amazing workmanship for thousands of years. The Minoan culture made golden jewellery out of sub-milimeter spheres. Why should we now tolerate the insult that consumer computers are?
I only move them around the house, never on the road. When I move them, I place them in a Thule Gauntlet. I really take care of these babies as I find it wasteful not to.
So that is my anecdata on the 'stability' and 'care' of Apple.
My experience differs from yours. Both are wrong and true. You could just be unlucky, and so can I. No need to completely write off Dell or Lenovo over that though.
"Macbooks seem to be the only viable option these days", because I had bad experiences with two non-Macbook computers.
To be fair; I don't think that the author came to that conclusion only from those 2 anecdotes. But still, that is the way the argument is presented. And it really looks absurd.
All of these laptops are higher end business models from major OEMs (Dell, HP, Lenovo, etc...) I was an avid fan of Thinkpad T series laptops for quite a while, but in the last couple of years I've had a lot of problems with them and am no longer confident in that series. I've never been a fan of HP, and have had mixed results with their products. Their higher end business stuff is decent, but I've had issues here and there. Oddly, despite the many horror stories I've heard, the Dell Latitudes I've worked with have been the most rock-solid. No swollen batteries, no broken displays, no random bricking (happened to two different T460Ss I had), no BSODs.
I've personally not had great experiences with Macs in general, but have a lot less experience with them than PCs. I have not found Macs to be notably better than mid to high end PCs in terms of hardware quality.
hackers are working hard on really cool daily driver laptops that respect your freedom and work to deliver an excellent computing experience.
system76 offers a good balance of performance and value: https://system76.com/laptops
pinebook offers a competitive and cheap arm daily driver: https://pine64.com/
and purism frankly rivals Apple levels of build quality and performance: https://puri.sm/
At work I had several MBP in the meantime. All of them with several problems. Docker extremely slow, Bluetooth not working, ports not working, noise like a nuclear reactor, extremely hot like you can actually make a pizza on top also the OS is very strict and hard to tell any other MBP user how to install things or how to configure it feels like a roulette and some of them if you open more than 6 apps it may reboot so good luck if MBP is your only option because you will be screw.
My whole family and most of my colleagues use macs/iOS all over, and interacting with these things is plain infuriating to me. Plus, somehow Apple pulls an amazing PR stunt where somehow everything is purported to be easy, but really they rely on untold hours of non-volunteer work from family & friends who feel bound to help out with Mac handling, because they feel "it's apple, it has to be easy... right?"
Anyhow, these are my two cents.
I really think that Apple devices get so much clout mostly due to advertising.
My issues with my iPhone 7 radio made me switch to Android after they told me it was Qualcomm's fault that it wasn't bonded to the PCB properly.
My 2009 MacBook Pro 13" had some sort of issue where the SATA III part of the controller died and I was forced to either pay $800 for a new logic board because I had upgraded the RAM or use an optical drive HDD caddy which ran at SATA I(?) speeds. I had also had the logic board replaced once and the screen replaced twice less than a year after I got it as the screen had stopped working. Don't remember the actual cause of the issue, but seeing as it was covered I have a feeling there was a known issue with that line.
My girlfriend's 2011 13" MacBook Pro ended up with non-functioning USB ports due to a known but never recalled, even silently, issue with a chip on the logic board. Again, would have been a $500+ logic board replacement "fix".
My 2016 MacBook Air 13" started to develop a crack on the black plastic piece covering the hinge because of heat stress. I paid for the most "performant" SKU and after one major macOS update it was practically unusable.
My mom's 2017 MacBook Air 13" worked fine until this past year where the trackpad and keyboard died. Sure, got 5 years out of it, but this is also a very common issue as far as I can tell from research. Also, who the hell routes the keyboard through the trackpad? That's madness.
This is all anecdotal for sure, but I am staying away from Apple products from now on based on my experience. Especially these days with the machines having non-user-serviceable parts, I just can't take the risk anymore. What happens when my logic board inevitably dies? All of my data on that device is toast with no way to recover it. Ultimately you have to purchase something that's going to work and is serviceable... either by yourself or a service center.
Pardon me, but I think Microsoft should get their shit together if they want to stop losing users and devs to MacOS.
Having a new UI style on the Desktop and every single click on it leads to a completely unpredictable UI doesn't have anything to do with "center".
When people ask me what to get I always answer "just get a macbook" because even when I would love to give them a shiny Linux laptop, the amount of maintenance work on there is insanely high. Macbooks compared to my Linux systems are basically maintenance free once they are setup.
Of course that depends on whether you want to develop software on it...but let's not kid ourselves here: most users are not developers. And most users don't want to use i3wm or the Terminal.
Complaining about this is like complaining that cats don’t behave like dogs.
macOS has its own idiosyncrasies. It may not be for everyone, but maybe this is the reason why things “just work” for the general public (and more).
I’m not aware of Windows working on Apple Silicon, but there is Asahi Linux which, I hear, has done a good job with their M1 support, although it likely comes with compromises (again, this is second hand information).
Then if I do want a laptop I could buy a chassis with a battery, keyboard, trackpad, screen, etc, etc to dock my device above in to.
Edit: Seriously considering taking the motherboard out of a steam deck and making a custom aluminum enclosure for it that only exposes the usb-c port.
It's all about personal requirements and I suppose, taste.
Don't get me wrong, the MacBook is a fantastic laptop, especially for the creative professional and laypeople.
For me, as a Linux user and enthusiast, MacBooks have slowly become less and less viable each year.
I bought my first MacBook in 2007, in college, and have used MacBooks as my primary choice of device until 2018. I still use a MacBook professionally, as it is what my company distributes for development machines.
They are beautifully crafted, well integrated, and optimized for a good amount of use cases.
What they are no longer good for is openness. They are slowly migrating away from being able to access low level things, and when you can it's highly limited. Each year, I feel like the OS and hardware creep toward iPad levels of openness.
A lot of open source software will stop being supported for M1 (MX moving forward) chipsets if they choose to ditch backwards compatibility with current architectures. Powerful tiling window managers are all but extinct on macOS, with the exception of yabai, which you need to disable a lot of security features just to use.
I bought my wife a MacBook for Christmas in 2020 and I was very jealous. The hardware and the OS are simply beautiful. However it simply doesn't work for me anymore.
I bought an XPS developer edition in 2018, slapped Arch Linux on it and never had any serious issues.
My next laptop will be another XPS, ThinkPad, Systemic, or a Star book, but I will continue to look at MacBooks with envy.
That being said, if MacBooks meet your requirements, it's hard not to argue that it's a good machine, if not the best, possibly lending to your feeling that it's the "only choice".
But in the last 3 years, we've seen endless failings, across all brands, Dells and their shit batteries and docks, Lenovo and their cheap build quality, faulty keyboards, screens with ghosting and dead pixels, cases cracking, Apples big issues we've seen is motherboards, and power circuitry.
It is just so frustrating to have to go through the read tape, and headaches only to be told that a new unit won't be available for a weeks.
I wish, there was a reliable vendor, but like so much else it just seems that quality is the lowest concern.
I miss the pre-2016 macs
I think you're likely going to encounter some faulty equipment from any vendor. I have enough family who swear by macbooks to know that the grass isn't much greener from their side and their hardware breaks too. I would be hesitant to switch ecosystems over 2 bad experiences.
Funny screens, overheating, broken trackpads, the infamous keyboard.
They are definitely more annoying that you can't swap the disks if they need sending off for repair though.
At 10th of this month I bought MacBook M1 that has 16 GB RAM and 512 GB disk. I did dual boot macOS Monterey and Asahi Linux. I could not find a way to turn off boot sound, selecting that menu option at macOS did not work. When I was away from keyboard, macOS did go to sleep mode, even when I tried make it not to at power settings. Asahi Linux did keep running, so my HexChat IRC etc did not stop when away from computer. Linux is still best work OS. I did like MacBook M1 is silent.
At 14th of this month I had to return MacBook M1 to warranty repair, because it does not boot anymore. It does charge to full, but does not boot.
Good luck finding working laptop.
Also, I have been wanting to try https://system76.com/ for quite a while but I can't get my work to approve one.
Used a Dell XPS for a while, it's a fairly good experience with Linux (Ubuntu and Manjaro), but the build quality is pretty bad. Once it fell backwards from a coffee table and shorted the main board from the hit. I had to resolder a few SMD parts, was not fun. I also hit the corner or the "metal" lid which cracked and bent from an impact what wouldn't even scratch a MacBook. Needless to say, Dell's support was not helpful.
Now I've got a new 2022 ASUS ROG Zephyrus M16, and so far the experience is much better. It's a sturdy machine, without any Dell's creaking and bending, the keyboard is much better as well. ASUS Linux community at https://asus-linux.org/ is helpful and most of the features worked either out of the box, or with reasonable amount of tinkering. The price for it here in Shanghai is also reasonable, 12700h w/ nvidia 3060, 2T SSD, and 40GB DDR5 RAM is ~US$2250.
I am not going to use a closed source black box OS from Apple, with the possibility of remote surveillance of my device whenever the company or governments want.
ALL modern windows laptops are broken inherently due to Microsoft's forcing of Modern standby on manufacturers, this means that pretty much every manufacturer has removed S3 sleep from their laptops, this means that laptops cannot and will not deep sleep.
You can't quickly shut the lid on any of the new Dell or Lenovo laptop, the fans stay on cooking itself if you put it into a bag (not covered under warranty btw) or just draining the battery.
Microsoft Modern / Connected standby is so broken that many people are returning their laptops (just hit Reddit to see how widespread this is)
I have just moved my company away from Dell as a primary provider because our $8K XPS 9710's are basically useless as laptops.
We even tried to set "Hibernate on Lid close" and "Auto Power on Lid Open" - Hibernate fails about 1/3rd of the time basically causing a hard reset and loss of anything that was open.
Our company is now a Mac only company and unfortunately for Dell its not likely going to change in the future.
Yeah, I've had a few of these and all of them have had issues. On one, the speaker blew. On another the battery died. On another the wi-fi died.
I was thinking recently about tech reviews, because they're usually all glowing for the Dell XPS series. But these reviewers probably get brand-new units, play with them for a week, and then send them back. I wish they'd focus on things like build quality (not just the materials), longevity, customer support, defect rate etc.
My wife has some cheap Acer laptop, it's all plastic, the thing gets thrown in her work bag like lunch, but it never dies. It's like a Toyota, and my laptop is like a Mercedes needing special care with cotton gloves.
My work laptop is a Macbook, and it feels way "sturdier" than my XPS. It certainly sees rougher treatment, and never misses a beat.
Edit: The throttling would happen despite the CPU temperature being normal for average workloads. It certainly wasn't running at full power near 95°C and then slowing down to protect itself. We even tried providing increased airflow and a laptop cooling stand. It didn't help or make a difference on when it would drop down to throttling range. We tried all sorts of Windows power management settings, a few Lenovo power management apps, updating the firmware, and yet nothing helped.
I ultimately decided to get a new Macbook Pro 14in (on sale for $1750) and have 0 regrets so far.
It has it all. Lightweight, great battery life, big screen, full backlit keyboard, numpad, latest processors, USB-C charging and display, the only PC trackpad that beats the Mac. And with PowerToys, you can lay out the keyboard however you need.
Unless you need a dedicated GPU, it's the complete PC laptop in my opinion.
The really annoying thing is that they tried so hard to replicate the MacBook packaging experience. This failed miserably when it wouldn’t come out of the box because the vacuum forming was wrong.
Shows how much QA goes into a product if they can’t actually not fuck up the box.
I'm typing this from an old Thinkpad T470, which is still pretty adequate for development work, with an M.2 SSD and 32 GB RAM, running Linux. I don't feel constrained.
2006 HP Pavillion - dragged around the world. Felt a bit cheap/plasticy but never had any major issues.
2013 Macbook Pro Retina was a champ, a bit dated now. Saved me from massive back-injury when I fell on some ice and acted as a shield. Put a huge dent in the corner. Speakers rumbled a bit after. Unusable now due to MacOS limit.
2015 Asus Zenbook Pro still quite usable. Windows 10 still happy. Keys felt a bit plastic/motile but still decent to type on.
2022 Dell Latitude 7520 just arrived, extremely light and peppy. Overall has a very utilitarian feel with a backspace key and function row. Nice big trackpad. Hope it lasts a while.
Now the only funny thing is if you add up the cost of all the non Apple laptops it equated to the same cost as all the others combined.
Pavillion ~$800, Zenbook Pro ~$1299, Dell ~$1699, Macbook Pro Retina: ~$3700
Definitely got my eye on a https://frame.work/ soon for personal.
- Much better battery life (both when you buy it, and how slowly it degrades)
- Windows is just a mess. MacOS is way nicer, and has the advantage for developers of being Unix based. And compared to linux, things generally just work which is a major boost to overall productivity.
- Build quality is unmatched and always has been. Materials are nicer, things fit together properly, they’re light, etc
- Touchpad is amazing
- Performance is great. It feels like the parts work together rather than individually, and the machine is optimised for real tasks rather than isolated benchmarks.
There are many good reasons to use a freer linux laptop but productivity is not one of them, in my experience.
I would add that the quality of Asus laptops in general seems to be pretty great. I have another 9-year old Asus that was used extensively by my kid for her online classes the last couple of years. It still runs as well as it did when I bought it, and I've never had it repaired.
What does that mean exactly? I'm genuinely curious about what Apple forces a user to do. I would think cost is a concrete example ... But does Apple restrict you from using some software? or executing some work related function? some other functionality? or is that "Apple way" with regard to Apple's user experiences?
I wish there was a "Vent HN:" for posts like this. I'm not saying there isn't a legitimate argument in the original post; but there's a lot of hyperbole & vague statements too. And venting can be healthy.
On the other hand, I had two 2018 Intel MBPs fail in the span of 4 days last month. Just my personal work computer. I set up 2 new MBPs in 1 week. Don't know the cause but after a while they would stop starting up properly. I ended up with an M1.
I speculate it's all related to covid shortages somehow but who knows.
For my home laptop, I had been using, for around the last 4 years, an HP Chrome 13 g1 Chromebook (6Y75), which I really loved. Got one for my son for last Christmas for $120 landed. 16GB RAM, 32GB SSD, 2560x1440 display. The original one I got for $550, it was refurbed on woot. List price was more over a grand, but I wasn't prepared to spend that on the experiment.
For the longest time it didn't support the Linux containers, but that got remedied last year. I was mostly using it for the browser and using a Chrome extension to SSH into my work machines. With the Linux containers, it's a full Linux environment, though with some restrictions.
However, over it's life it lived very well up to the "just works" idea that I got it initially to try out. OS updates are super fast (they just show up and when you reboot next they are there, <30 seconds).
If you need a full laptop running Linux, you're going to just need to get a laptop. I'd probably consider another Dell, it has worked fine. My last Thinkpad had some weird battery issues, and because of it's slim config it had two small batteries and I wasn't quite ready to have work buy $300+ of batteries for a problem I couldn't reliably reproduce.
But, I'd definitely consider a Chromebook with Linux containers for lighter duty work.
Ditched that and switched to a low-range HP. All my work was on the cloud anyway. Worked really nice and exceeded all expectations. Linux worked just out-of-the-box.
Then I owned a high-range Asus, and it was the best laptop I have ever seen or used. Loved the product.
I use high-range Asus from that point in my life. Great experience. Linux works, has NVIDIA GPU w/ CUDA, everything just works great! Couldn't complain.
Made two friends switch to high-range Asus for life, as well.
What a ridiculous post.
The unfortunate effect, though, is that even many brands that were upmarket at one point have moved downmarket to build their business model around volume as economies of scale and commoditization have taken over the industry. I remember in the mid-90s when IBM stopped supplying mechanical keyboards with PC desktops, where other manufacturers had stopped long ago, thus removing another reason to pay the premium for an IBM. I can tell you as well that the current generation of Thinkpads are a far cry from the T60 and X30 of yesteryear.
As it happens, I too have come to the same conclusion. I've been using Macbooks and old refurbished Thinkpads for personal computing devices for several years now. Luckily if you build your own desktop, you still have many high quality options to choose from in assembling it, but for laptops Macbooks are the name of the game, everything else is just grossly inferior from a craftsmanship, aesthetic, and build quality perspective. Frankly, I think companies stopped moving downmarket and started staying in place while cutting costs as much as possible, and somewhere along they way they just stopped caring. Apple is the only laptop-producing company left that seems to care about it's products, and I hope they stick to it.
For me personally the keyboard is one of the most important things and nobody gets it right anymore however I recently got a cheap Acer (usually use Asus but their keyboards took a horrible turn) which doesn't have the most awful keyboard and common keys do not require a 3 finger contortionist exercise.
It works reasonably well on either windows or Linux, despite being an AMD disaster - I got the AMD variant of the swift 3 and aside from being typical modern ultrabook filmsy crap (like appple, too), it's actually ok (but depending on WiFi environment may want to replace the mediatek, although it's only caused me issues on garbage consumer AP's like isp provided).
As for the buying experience well that's locality dependent, I ordered online and picked it up from a robot machine a few hours later (alza cz)
Replace "computer" with "laptop" and the above statement might be true. I use desktop computers because I've worked remotely for almost my entire career, and I haven't had a problem with a desktop since the 90s.
Fast forward to 2015, the first gen Surface Book feels similar. The build quality surpassed the PowerBooks I was used to, Windows was pretty decent for getting things done. I've used it for 7 years now without any problems, although I know that when the battery comes to the end of its life, a replacement will be difficult to arrange. The whole thing feels proprietary which means I haven't bothered to install Linux on here, but I don't require it in daily life/work. The OS still feels fast, and it's easy to troubleshoot what could potentially slow it down with Windows.
Oh -- and my P50 could apparently withstand waterboarding... though I'll just take Louis Rossmann's word for it (and video) rather than trying to duplicate the experiment myself: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ig3xI8dUdm0
I recently bought a refurbished x270 from an IT supplier outlet:
- 1TB SSD
- 16GB RAM
- IPS display
- A keyboard you can _actually_ use
- for about 500$
I still have a desktop at home for heavy duty lifting, but for light tasks or doing some work sitting in the garden or at a cafe, it is the perfect form factor. It is running Debian 11 + KDE plasma 5 with no issues.
Don't underestimate the upgrade-ability of old thinkpads, they are sort of modern Theseus ships.
Instead of a laptop, have you considered purchasing a VR computer?[1]
[1] https://simulavr.com/blog/why-vrcs-are-better-than-pcs-and-l...
I convinced my current CTO to let me use a Linux machine, and I bought a ThinkPad P14S with Ryzen 7 5800H. I will definitely prefer companies which allow me to use a ThinkPad. I'm on Ubuntu running qtile, with custom tooling for myself that I wrote in Rust. I blaze through my work because of how comfortable I've gotten with the experience. If someone offers me a buttload of money to work with a Mac, I will ask them to give me a cloud machine and use mosh to do all my work. But yes, for the same money, the company that gives me a ThinkPad and tells me to install my own OS gets my yes anyday. It's a far better developer experience.
Why our choice is an ancient refurbished pre-shit ThinkPad or Mac? You can't throw a rock without hitting a random developer — but they all type on self-destructing shittops… And they type emails to customer support instead of coding.
Essentially modern laptops, mobile workstation included, to my eyes are more and more craptops more and more similar to mobile "smart-crap". Some still need them, students for instance, hybrid workers, people who work out of an office etc. But others can accept the loss in portability to gain in quality, upgradability and comfort. A classic, self assembled, desktop with eventually caddy and 2.5" classic ssds to being able to move data, if not the entire OS, around as needed. Not as free as a laptop, but doable under certain circumstances.
For instance:
2021 Macbook Pro 16" gets a rating of 93 (https://www.notebookcheck.net/Apple-MacBook-Pro-16-2021-M1-P...)
Lenovo ThinkPad P1 G4 has a 90 rating (https://www.notebookcheck.net/Lenovo-ThinkPad-P1-G4-laptop-r...)
Are the reviewers just not evaluating machines on any real world basis? Grading on some ridiculous curve?
I had an issue with my Samsung smart phone at one point. However, I couldn't part with the phone for x number of weeks, to send it in, for an assessment.
After that, I realized ease of support on iPhone was the biggest differentiator between Apple and other brands
Where Apple shines is in providing an Arm laptop - that's unrivalled as of now. They still have some issues with those laptop but maybe the next generation will be good.
On my side, I'll just switch to desktop pc I can assemble and get an Arm Macbook if I need to travel.
The T580 is much more plasticky, and it's also the last one since they ditched the 2.5 inch bay, and they still don't give you two drive slots (unless you get the 15p) except for sourcing one of about 2 models of SSD that fit the WLAN slot, which is getting harder and harder. And the suspend battery life is maybe 20% of what it used to be, but I could probably fix that if I wanted to.
Anyway, it doesn't quite feel as amazing to me as the T440s was, and I know some people hate the '40 machines.
For me, without a shadow of doubt, macbooks has been the least reliable peace of technology that I've used for the past years. I can't deny that their support is awesome and they will change anything without questions if you have the money to pay for the repair or you are still under warranty. However, I would really appreciate if I didn't have to use the service.
I haven't used the new M1's, I really hope that they are more reliable.
I'm surprised about the Carbon X1 but I've not heard positive things about the newer models so not completely surprised.
These days I'm using gaming-level laptops based on OEM from Clevo and Tongfang and I've been really happy with them. However, I do up-spec my machines.
I actually bought 5 Macbooks M1 for friends and family last year, because it's a trendy gift. I tried one for myself. I liked screen brightness. I didn't like that many programs weren't available without creating an Apple account, very expensive memory and SSD, and lack of games. So I went with a Gigabyte gaming laptop. 4k oled display, 3080 GPU, 32GB RAM and 1.5TB SSD for $4k - much better bang for money imho.
I say this while having pretty meh experiences with earlier generation (~2019 and earlier) HP elite models used for work.
Usually if you go for the workstations, they have a longer lifecycle and get some engineering TLC, the CAD/GIS/high end audience usually has its own budget and doesn’t skinflint as much as normal corporate IT.
Lenovo is overrated and Dell sells so many models that you need to do alot of homework to figure out what is good and what is junk.
+ Build quality
+ Screen quality
+ Software cohesiveness
+ Customer support
+ Longevity
+ Resale value
A MacBook is basically a no-brainer today. Even a MB Air is good now. Apple is killing the laptop game right now.
The Macbooks generally spent more time being shipped to and from Apple warranty centers for repairs then they did being used for work.
Maybe we were just unlucky, but it says something when more than 4 dozen Macbooks were utter pieces of crap.
MacOS - mini or macbook - is just a life-changer. It's like having your own Tesla instead of walking or taking the bus. Don't be so put off by the marketing and fandom that you actually make yourself suffer. Just get one.
Years from now you'll still be accelerating, and your former troubles will be laughable.
BTW got a huawei matebook as of late. Pretty decent - tries to look like a macbook too
I'm happy with my purchase but I'm still not a fan of Apple and their philosophy in any way. If there was a real competitor to the M1, I would switch in a heartbeat.
One thing I’ve noticed is that nearly every damn laptop I’ve had the past few years has power management issues.
Usually it’s some issue waking from a sleep state, but I had a modern Thinkpad just give up and die recently after months of continuing getting stuck in sleep states.
It also has a 360 hinge so it can become a tablet. Love it. Great for work, any workloads that are heavier and I'm on a desktop. Only downer is no usb-c charging but eh that's barely the end of the world. Rig gets treated rough like the tool it is. Cops a thrashing. People overthink laptops imo.
I advise my clients against any major vendor lock in or bs high priced gear. Also having worked fixing Dells and lenovos under big corp contracts I advise against those too. Their support/diag is terrible. The money you save not buying their overpriced bs you can use for a few hot spares and still have coin leftover to spend on your local IT guy.
Deadset go do it on a desktop if you need more grunt than 1500 bucks can buy you. If your doing long haul sessions of work 8+ hours go use a desktop with a real keyboard and mouse too your ergo w/ a laptop is probably terrible. I'm not a fan of having laptops used as desktops, short runs sure but if your leaving it plugged in at a desk 8 hours a day get a desktop. Less ruined batteries, less headaches for me as your IT lol.
Tldr dell are AVG, Lenovo are AVG, apple are also AVG. Buy something cheap that gets the job done you'll replace it in 36 months anyways.
But Macbooks aren't any better.. You'll be paying for a new logic board exactly 1-2 years later out of warranty.
Lenovo has firmware issues which makes an extreme amount of laptops go black screen on resume suspend.
Dell XPS has had coilwhine for ages.
All laptops suck nowadays.
Seriously my win 10 laptop is always installing updates.. mostly kid plays Roblox on it.
I used centos for years then Ubuntu and still have Ubuntu on a machine or 3.
M1 is amazing tho.
"This my laptop, there are many like it, but this one is mine."
I look at apple's website, put the sliders to the right, and do it again in 5-6y.
I can't be bothered to figure out who has xyz feature or whatever. I don't care.
Some people will disagree, but IMHO: Yes.
What's your question?