5% of their Mac users vs 40% of their PC users (using their help desk) is exactly pertinent to the value added by ease of use (and a huge % difference).TomViolenz wrote:That's apples to oranges. A company like IBM has a totally different support and cost structure than even the most professional music producer. Besides I'm sure they lease their laptops anyways.
I work with lots of people and have observed the same thing. PC owners spend more time futzing with their machines for one reason or another. I'm happy to pay more for that. It's fine if someone else isn't. There are different choices for different peoples needs, interests and sensibilities.
I also find significant value in the software Apple includes. The iWork suite is included for free. For many people, that is sufficient and so there is no need to buy Office. There is the cost of Office saved.
Logic is $200... it is roughly an extra $300 to buy an equivalent on the PC (say Cubase).
Final Cut Pro is another example. Motion is an exceptional motion graphics software that has no PC equivalent. It's a helluva lot cheaper than After Effects.
Strictly from a financial standpoint, the Adobe subscription model aint so terrible but it does cost more if like me, you were used to only upgrading every second or third major update. That one mainly rubs me wrong personally. I refuse to pay a $50 monthly fee to Adobe. So I am dropping my use of Adobe software though still using Lightroom which is thankfully still subscription free. Apple is currently a better platform for not using Adobe. There are Final Cut and Motion, the new (mac only) Affinity apps Photo and Designer and an In-Design equivalent on the way. Those apps total $450 which is 9 months of Adobe and after 2 years, would be $450 vs $1200.
If the lack of user configurable/replaceable parts is a showstopper for you, then it is. That's fine. But that is something of a personal pet peeve just like the Adobe subscription model is for me. Just cause I refuse to pay Adobe per month, does not make any professional who decides to do so less professional or deluded about their costs. There is nothing wrong with you being annoyed about Apple's approach and choices, but financially speaking those things are relatively trivial.