Whenever I hear somebody moving to a Macbook and make any sort of complaint onkine, lots of people unhelpfully tell you to buy a $1000+ iPhone and that will solve all your problems, or when an Android user is “switching to iPhone”, a similar thing happens with “just use a Mac”. Why the hell do you need to purchase all the expensive devices to just use one?

Most of the time, using an iPhone, Mac, etc., does not “just work”. Maybe the UI is simply not very usable (not just Liquid Glass, see MacOS’s terrible implementation of a settings app, iOS not having an option to combine the quick settings and notifications), third-party devices (headphones, chargers, tablets, etc.) simply do not work well (no, “get the iDevice” is not helpful!), iOS having the most ass file management that may as well not exist, all the different bugs poking around everywhere (through my own experiences with iOS* and my friend’s with MacOS), etc. “Give more money to Apple to fix it” is not good advice and does not help to solve anything.

Why is it that, when Apple has inherently worse hardware, everybody seems to put up with it? On their Macs, you have 60 Hz LCD displays on a $1000+ laptop, no good ports selection unless you spend thousands more, ridiculously priced memory and storage upgrades that would be a death sentence to any other company, very shallow key travel that feels terrible to type on compared to other options, etc. As for their iPads, you have similarly not so great displays on a relatively high end tablet unless you spend thousands on a tablet with an uber-fancy M5 chip (why would anyone need that???), a keyboard case that is so expensive despite feeling like a cheap membrane keyboard you got on Aliexpress and being so top-heavy, etc. Who in their right mind would purchase a $550 set of headphones made of ridiculously heavy metal, with uncomfortable cushions, terrible battery life, mid ANC, and several year old innards?

How has Apple manipulated so many people with their marketing? I don’t really see anything quite like it in other product segments. What is the secret apple sauce?

*note that I currently run an Android phone, but I have my issues with them too that I won’t get into. My particular device is very bloated and incredibly annoying to work with sometimes, but it’s what I’ve got. On my laptop I happily run Linux, where the device simply listens to me which is a nice change of pace

edit: Actually, no, I think something similar occurs with Nintendo (in video games) and Disney (for films)

  • DarkFuture@lemmy.world
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    15 minutes ago

    How has Apple manipulated so many people with their marketing?

    Look around you. People are DUUUUUUMB.

    People don’t do their homework. People like to one up each other. People like to flaunt that they have the coolest shit.

    I’m an IT professional. It’s easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than to find an actual IT professional that likes Apple products unless they work for Apple.

    It’s not that Apple products don’t work, it’s that they’re inferior in every way but I guess looking cooler.

    To each their own. If people want to blow a bunch of money unnecessarily, then that’s their prerogative. But people who know better are going to mock them for it.

  • TheRagingGeek@lemmy.world
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    1 hour ago

    As someone who migrated from android pixel to an all in Apple ecosystem I’ll provide my context. As a software developer for cloud most of my software runs in Linux, so having a platform that mirrors it pretty closely is a plus, in addition to being a sturdy and performant coding machine, development on a windows laptop has always been far clunkier and unstable comparatively to my Mac experience. From there a person recommended I get an Apple TV to get away from my Samsung smart TV integrations that were dog shit slow, this was a vast improvement plus I could mirror my laptop to the tv easily.

    From there I decided I wanted to do some pen drawing on a tablet, and I looked into things like remarkable etc but my experience with android tablets with pens was lackluster so I went with a iPad Pro with the pencil and it has been a great experience, the fact that it can seamlessly be controlled by the MacBook was pretty stunning the first time I accidentally discovered that feature. Follow that up with being able to plug in the iPad and have it be a 2nd display and it has been a great companion to the MacBook.

    I got my wife a iPad Air as well and she loved it so when it came time to upgrade our phones I looked at my history with android, of my last 4 android pixel devices all 4 of them had to be recalled either for a bricked scenario from a patch or battery expansion. I decided I might as well give the iPhone a try, this also allowed my wife to have a universal computing experience as she could open tabs on her phone then migrate to the tablet seamlessly.

    When I got the iPhones I decided to get their AirPod pros as well since I heard they can pretty easily transition(without button press) between devices easily, and that it has hearing aid grade audio enhancement(I am old and have bad hearing in certain scenarios. The user tailored enhanced hearing was game changing in certain environments and the transitioning between devices has been in all but 1 scenario a great experience(for some reason my iPhone 16 and the AirPods don’t always get along, requiring a phone restart to get them to operate).

    Android auto vs CarPlay is personal preference but I find CarPlay to be a bit more sleek and easier to navigate and more performant.

    So the trick at least for me has been how seamlessly it all fits together, the hardware quality and polish(aside from the iPhone/airpod thing that does annoy me pretty hard) and the reduction in overhead I have. Instead of dealing with windows 11 bloat and spyware, android device quality and occasional patching problems, a TV that runs like dogshit because it’s using old phone hardware to drive the experience, I can instead focus on what I want to do with the hardware, it just makes me more productive, less admin work, more time to create.

    Time will tell I suppose if I feel the same way when my current stack ages out of the support window, but overall I prefer the low maintenance I encounter with this setup so I can focus my efforts on my docker swarm and other facets of my homelab.

  • nullify3112@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    I think you need to understand how powerful Apple’s marketing is, especially in the US. People just like a system that is simple and just works. Their use cases are limited. They don’t want to spend time to figure out which distro to install or which instance to join, they just want to start their browser and go on twitter.

    I will disagree with your statement on iPad displays. The iPad has been one of the only viable tablet out there for graphic artists. The pencil is great, the color accuracy and consistency between Apple devices is excellent, the device is just functional for that type of workflow. Now if only it were repairable and not subject to planned obsolescence…

  • DireTech@sh.itjust.works
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    As far as laptops go, exactly which company is producing a competitive product to Macs? Like at this point it’s a no brainer, get a cheap Mac for an average user and they get better hardware and don’t have to deal with how bad Windows has become. I’ve even switched grandma over to one after her PC died.

    I run Linux for my own stuff but given a choice between a mac or windows for work I’ll take the Mac every time. Even the cheapest Mac beats the typical business laptops. Good screen. Touchpad that doesn’t utterly suck. Better performance.

  • AskewLord@piefed.social
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    The reasons you hate these things are the reasons other people love them.

    Other people are not you. They have different preferences and values. They like what you hate.

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    9 hours ago

    I can answer this from the perspective of someone who, until 18 months ago, was all-in on Apple stuff.

    The short answer is: As long as all of your devices are reasonably new and running the latest software, they’re all really good at talking to each other. Got a Mac and an iPad? Great, you can use Universal Control to operate the iPad using your Mac’s keyboard and mouse/trackpad. And that is a genuinely useful technology. Got something on your phone that you want to share with your partner on the TV? AirPlay it across to Apple TV. And so, and so forth.

    Thing is, once you’re in that situation, you’re kinda stuck. If your Mac ages out of OS feature support, the only option is to replace the Mac if you want it to match the interconnectivity features of your new iPhone. So the answer in that situation is to buy a new Mac, one that supports the new features available in the newest OS. At that point, your options are to either shell out £1000+ on a new Mac, or completely change your workflow to one that can be achieved using open source or paid alternatives. The vast majority of people have neither the time nor the inclination to set up things like that, so they factor in the cost of a new computer, phone, or iPad every few years.

    But Apple’s real secret sauce is that - and judging by the attitude you’re swinging around in your post, OP, you’re not going to like this - they make REALLY good hardware.

    My primary computer is still a 15" M2 MacBook Air. That thing is super thin, super light, completely silent to use and has never given me a moment’s trouble in three years that I didn’t somehow inflict on myself. Using Crossover, I can play Windows games on it just as easily as using Steam/Proton on my Linux PC. I can play RDR2 on my fanless ARM laptop and get a perfectly fine 30fps when I’m not at home. The battery is three years old but still gives me a full day of use. Sure, it only has two ports, but both of them are Thunderbolt 4, and it has a dedicated Magsafe charging port.

    I still have my 2011 MacBook Pro at home. It’s currently running Debian and is still rock solid. Looking a little rough around the edges these days, but still a perfectly usable computer - that’s 15 years old.

    Apple has inherently worse hardware

    This just isn’t true. At all. The build quality of their hardware is the best in the business.

    Sure, they effectively paywall things like 120hz screens to the higher end Pro models, but they have enough market research telling them that people who buy a mid range iPhone don’t care about refresh rates, or even know what they are. Why spend money on a QoL upgrade that the user will never notice?

    But yeah, their cost for memory and storage is downright criminal, and always has been. The only thing that’s changed in recent(ish) years is that now everything is soldered or proprietary, they’ve made it effectively impossible to upgrade it yourself at a far, far lower cost. And that’s incredibly shitty.

    These days I’m primarily a Linux user. My work PC is Kubuntu, my home server Debian, my gaming PC CachyOS. None of those machines are as easy to use as my Macbook running macOS 15. They can (theoretically) achieve more, but in the 2 years I’ve been using Linux I’ve had to teach myself how to use a command line; something I very, very rarely needed to when I just used macOS alone.

    But I reached a point where I got sick of Apple’s bullshit, their performative stance on progressive politics that didn’t match the image of Tim Apple licking Trump’s ring. So I traded in my iPhone 13 mini for a Pixel 9 onto which I immediately installed GrapheneOS. That one act completely broke the spell of the interconnected nature of Apple products for me. I still have an iPad mini, but 90% of its use is as a peripheral for my MacBook, where it does still have genuine utility.

    So yeah, Apple don’t do anything particularly groundbreaking, they just make good hardware running software that’s mostly good and useful. People, it may shock you to learn, generally prefer to use devices that don’t need much tinkering to keep them running.

      • kkj@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        6 hours ago

        Their hardware has been better relative to the competition than ever in the ARM era. The M5 is a monster. I just wish I could afford one with plenty of RAM and could run Linux on it.

        • djdarren@piefed.social
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          Yeah, my only wish for my M2 is that Asahi is up to 100% by the time Apple pull the support for it. It’s close. Damn close. But still far enough away that it feels like a compromise.

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    1. Apple has always designed things for people who want to do things without having to be a technologist. For which I will always credit them, massively.

    2. Apple has always designed things to work together seamlessly. Again, massive kudos, even though I condemn their using this to lock people in.

    Then there’s Job’s cult of personality, marketing Apple as for people who are better than the plebes.

    I’ve never been a fan of Apple as a company, but I’ve always given massive credit for the good ideas behind making things that just work.

    • lordnikon@lemmy.world
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      Or creating the myth it just works. As someone that supports corporate macs this is definitely a myth.

  • alternategait@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    I’m a nearly everything apple user. It started with a macbook air that I was gifted. It was an incredibly stable laptop that basically just always worked. I had no troubles doing things like finding the printers in my department or the library (something which was stupid frustrating with my prior laptop). I had that laptop without any other apple products for 7-8 years.

    The iPhone started my move into everything else. I used to have a fit bit but when the battery died, I got the apple watch because it was so much easier to connect/keep connected. I got airpods for the same reason.

    I want stuff that works the way I expect it to work and works all the time. Everything I’ve had is very stable.

    • dkppunk@piefed.social
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      7 hours ago

      Honestly, this has been my experience too. I’m not an all in Apple user, but I have had a few devices over the years and for the every day user, it’s a pretty easy experience.

      I started with the old Apple router. That thing ran like a champ and I was really sad when they got rid of it. It was what made my gamer buddy more open to Apple products, games ran great on that thing. I didn’t purchase another Apple product for a few years. I used to talk so much shit about Apple and I was hopeful that the Microsoft Zune would be the iPod killer. It wasn’t, but I still have my 2 Zunes.

      I had an original Motorola Droid with the flip out keyboard (something I truly miss). But the OS was garbage and I constantly had issues. Eventually, I purchased my first iPhone off a friend for about $50. I think it was a 6 or something. More to help friend out than me needing a new phone, it was my chance to try an iPhone for cheap. It was a significant upgrade to my previous phones.

      After that, I have kept with iPhones because upgrading to a new system is extremely simple. Previously, you had to pay to transfer info from one device to the next, it could be done at home but it was a lot harder. With the iPhone, I literally just log in and everything is there. Yes, I save things to the cloud. Yes, I understand the problems it has, but I accept that. Now, I have an iPhone 13 that I will probably be able to get another 2-3 years out of. I don’t ever buy the Pro because it’s more than I need, I usually get the regular with more on device storage when I upgrade. I also have an AppleTV because I feel it’s one of the better plug in TV devices and it links seamlessly to my iPhone.

      For me (and probably the vast majority of Apple device users) “it just works” is enough to keep me happy. I don’t need all of the customization that Android provides, but I’m so glad it’s an option for people. I have stability, user ease, and an ecosystem that, while it may be closed, it’s simple and doesn’t really have any issues. I almost never experience the issues that most people complain about with Apple products.

      I’m still all in on PC though, I don’t need a Mac because it’s too expensive for what I do on my computer, which is mostly playing World of Warcraft. I still use Windows because I don’t do much with customization so many of the issues people have with Windows, I have never experienced. I’d like to move to a Linux system, but when I tried last year, I couldn’t get Warcraft running, so I switched back to Windows. I will likely wait until I get a new PC before I try again. With computers, most people’s options are Mac or Windows because that’s what is at the store. Linux isn’t typically sold installed on a device (which I wish it was) and a lot of people just want to open the box, start it up, and go.

      • alternategait@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        I wanted to add that I’ve been everywhere in laptop operating systems. The computer that I used before the first macbook was running Mint. I use a Windows laptop for work. I’ve had 2 or 3 major problems with my macs. I’ve have 3 major problems with my windows machine so far this year (and a dozen other smaller issues).

        • dkppunk@piefed.social
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          Yeah, I’ve had a few issues here and there across all of my devices, but most can be fixed with a restart. I’m literally the only person at work who does not have constant problems with my work Windows laptop. But I’m also the only person who shuts it down every day at the end of my shift and goes out of my way to check for updates.

          I get why folks who are more involved in their devices or prefer more customization may not like Apple products, but a lot of people just see them as a device to connect to the internet or write papers etc. and that’s about it. Folks like Apple because it works for them.

          I’m really happy there are options for people to have a device that suits their needs.

  • DagwoodIII@piefed.social
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    8 hours ago

    One of the funniest essays I ever read was by porn actress Bobbi Starr. It was about porn’s addiction to Apple products. Someone copied it from an issue of FOX Magazine.

    The idea was that a girl could shoot, edit, and distribute all her own stuff on Apple devices.

  • remon@ani.social
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    11 hours ago

    Why is it that, when Apple has inherently worse hardware

    Uhm … no? They have some of the best hardware, it’s just expensive.

    • sbeak@sopuli.xyzOP
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      9 hours ago

      They have some of the best hardware, it’s just expensive.

      And that’s the problem. Unless you spend unreasonable amounts of money, you don’t get a display that is similar in class to their competitors, the I/O, the keyboard, etc.

      And in the case of their over-ear headphones, their hardware is poor while still being expensive!

      • remon@ani.social
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        I don’t see the issue with a 60 Hz display, you’re not getting one for gaming. They have thunderbolt 4 ports, which is all you need and their keyboards are just fine. Some people prefer shallow key travel.

        Not sure about their peripherals as I don’t use them, but there is absolutely nothing wrong with their laptops other than being a bit more pricey.

        • sbeak@sopuli.xyzOP
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          I don’t see the issue with a 60 Hz display, you’re not getting one for gaming.

          But the devices don’t exist in a bubble. Laptops that cost much less get 90 or 120 Hz displays, and similarly priced options get OLED and touch support!

          They have thunderbolt 4 ports, which is all you need

          Until you need to connect your laptop to an HDMI display and don’t happen to have the required dongle that is sold separately. Or when you have a USB(-A) flash drive, you need a dongle too.

          Both of these cases are very common for all groups of people, particularly in educational settings.

          Some people prefer shallow key travel.

          Fair point actually

          but there is absolutely nothing wrong with their laptops other than being a bit more pricey.

          Again, that’s the issue.

          • Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            I have a MacBook Air that I connect to any of my screens through HDMI using a plethora of sub-20USD USB-C docks that are not made by Apple. I use the same docks for my other laptops. Would I make my MacBook Air bigger to have more ports in it? Fuck no, keep it tiny and put the ports on a SEVENTEEN US DOLLAR DOCK so I don’t need to put the motherfucka on life support every time I want to use my keyboard/mouse/monitor/external SSD/10key/controller/DAC

            I plug one cable in and it all works (and charges at 100w!)

            If I’m traveling and want to plug in a flash drive but don’t want to use a dock that’s less than half the size of a phone? My travel bag has USB A-to-c (and C-to-A) converters. Plug that wired bitch right in.

          • remon@ani.social
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            But the devices don’t exist in a bubble. Laptops that cost much less get 90 or 120 Hz displays, and similarly priced options get OLED and touch support!

            Ok, so some cheaper laptops have a useless advantage over macbooks. I don’t care. If I could pay one extra doller to get a macbook with a 120 Hz display, I’d save the dollar.

            Until you need to connect your laptop to an HDMI display and don’t happen to have the required dongle that is sold separately.

            That’s a feature! Dongles are great. You can connect dozens of peripheral by plugging in a single cable. I wish they would have stuck to that concept instead of re-introducing obsolete ports on their recent models. 4 TB ports + headphone jack was perfect!

            Again, that’s the issue.

            But why? No one is forcing you to buy their products if you don’t think they are worth the price. But a lot of people do and we didn’t need to be “tricked”.

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              8 hours ago

              Did you just claim that not having ports is a feature? Lol

              If you weren’t being facetious about that, I think you might’ve had too much of that Apple Kool-Aid.

              …which is actually probably a flavour of Kool-Aid, lmao

              • kobra@piefed.social
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                5 hours ago

                I think your knowledge is a bit dated? MacBook Pros have had HDMI ports since the M1 release in 2021.

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                8 hours ago

                Yes, not having legacy ports taking up space is a feature.

                I think you might’ve had too much of that Apple Kool-Aid.

                Repeating tropes sure is great if you don’t have arguments.

    • BlackLaZoR@lemmy.world
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      10 hours ago

      I’ve watched enough old Louis Rossmann videos to know their products are garbage. They might have good CPU but rest is designed and put together like a fresh turd

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        Are those videos around the 2016-2019 MacBooks? Because yeah, Apple massively dropped a bollock with those things.

        But I’m at a point where I’m genuinely pondering whether a fully-specced 2015 MacBook Pro running Linux might be a great replacement for the M2 MacBook Air I currently use, once it dies on me, or Apple drop support (whichever comes first (which will be the dropped support, guaranteed)). I said in another comment on here that I still have a 2011 MacBook Pro at home, running Debian, still trucking along as well as the day I bought it. My home server is a 2014 Mac mini (also running Debian) that’s my Jellyfin/Navidrome/Grimmory/Lidarr/QBittorrent server, all with just 8gb of soldered RAM, drawing very little power while doing it.

        Apple have many, many problems, but the build quality of their hardware ain’t one.

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          Are those videos around the 2016-2019 MacBooks?

          Yep, exactly that period. Repair vids of these MacBooks were how Louis grew into big well known youtuber with millions of views at some point.

    • sbeak@sopuli.xyzOP
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      Personally, I don’t get why the solution to many of the issues people experience with Apple devices is to buy another one.

      Yes, this is only a subset of people and the Internet shows you the worst of them, but I still find it a little hard to believe somebody reasonably suggests to purchases another device that costs so much!

      • GatesMcBalmer@lemmy.world
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        Personally, I don’t get why the solution to many of the issues people experience with Apple devices is to buy another one.

        I’m not really familiar with this. My wife uses a macbook. She’s had it for 6 years and I can’t recall any real issues with it.

        • sbeak@sopuli.xyzOP
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          Just from my personal experiences when I was using an iPhone several years ago, as well as whatI have seen on the Internet

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      11 hours ago

      They dont like them in any meaningful way, they are shiny, they are used to them and everyone they know has one. That is the size of it.

      • Miller@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        To re-phrase for the cheap seats people are willing to pay for familiarity and ease of use within a contained and overwatched environment. This demographic will make the transition to AI guardianship with barely a blip on the resistance scale. I am not being derogatory, it is probably the smart move.

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    11 hours ago

    They have an interconnected proprietary ecosystem. This is simultaneously one of their biggest strengths and biggest weaknesses.

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    11 hours ago

    It would probably be easier to answer the intent behind the question, if the question itself wasn’t embellished with wild exaggeration.

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    9 hours ago

    People love to feel superior and having blue text bubbles does that. Not green text bubbles (yuck) but blue text bubbles. It was that easy! /s

    • Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe
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      That’s overly simplistic.

      And I’ve disliked Apple products since the first Mac, though I could appreciate their intent.