Think you may need to add to your list external connectivity given Gen 1 AS MBA are restricted, Most good W10 OEM's you can at least swap SSD as a min, battery and other components replacement costs post 3 years. As most W10 laptops come with touch they tend to have tougher screens coverings/laminates, so there is a gain even if you never use touchBuild quality? Easy. The top end ultrabooks from almost any OEMs (HP, Dell, Asus, Lenovo, and even brands like MSi and Razer) all are already head to head with Apple in terms of materials and build quality.
As for performance, we have to look into heat and battery life for laptops, not just CPU/GPU performance. In this case, nothing beats the M1. Even for CPU performance, you have to go with 11th gen i7 intel to close the gap, but heat and battery life of intel are still disappointing.
For life cycle, any Windows laptop will beat Apple's offerings. Apple tends to just drop support after 5+ years after the last manufacturing date, including OS support. This might be acceptable for iPhones or iPads, but imo too short for desktops/laptops. This is in contrast with Windows that still support laptops from 10+ years ago.
As for cost, disregarding the performance part, you can usually find Windows laptops with more storage and RAM than an equivalently priced Mac. Eg. where Apple starts at 256GB SSD, Windows side probably will have 512GB standard. But I don't see prices free falling yet. I was expecting intel laptops to really dive in price due to the performance per watt of the M1, but this has not happened yet.
In short, for less than the Macbook Air, you can probably get a premium laptop with more RAM and storage, but the performance per watt of the M1 is still unmatched.
Just a quick example: Asus Zenbook flip, core i7, 16GB RAM, 512GB SSD, $999.
Not to steer the conversation too far off course, but I really disagree with this assessment. I have an unhealthy addiction to cool gadgets and notebooks in particular. I literally have an unlimited budget to buy a laptop right now and there are zero PC notebooks I would consider are of the same quality as the M1 MBP I am typing on right now. It's really unfortunate as I feel the quality overall has gone down over the years for Windows laptops. Maybe my standards are too high, but that's my real world experience. FYI, I prefer Windows over MacOS so that isn't the issue.Build quality? Easy. The top end ultrabooks from almost any OEMs (HP, Dell, Asus, Lenovo, and even brands like MSi and Razer) all are already head to head with Apple in terms of materials and build quality.
We are talking about mass produced things, obviously issues are possible. Even Macs are prone to issues (eg. flex cable issue, etc). But we are already way beyond the days of rickety plastic Windows laptops with sub-1080p screens. Build quality and finish wise, pretty much any of the premium ultrabooks are great. My favorites are particularly Asus Zenbook and HP Envy series, with MSi also a decent one. Dell is good, but for me they seem to be "heavier" than they look.Not to steer the conversation too far off course, but I really disagree with this assessment. I have an unhealthy addiction to cool gadgets and notebooks in particular. I literally have an unlimited budget to buy a laptop right now and there are zero PC notebooks I would consider are of the same quality as the M1 MBP I am typing on right now. It's really unfortunate as I feel the quality overall has gone down over the years for Windows laptops. Maybe my standards are too high, but that's my real world experience. FYI, I prefer Windows over MacOS so that isn't the issue.
With that said Lenovo Thinkpads are some of the better machines, but you have to be careful which model and config you get. For example, the X1 Carbon overall is a great machine. I loved mine, but when I started to develop headaches while using it I discovered that this is a known issue. The 4K display has terrible backlight flicker when you aren't using it at 100% brightness. I've never experienced this before, but the backlight dimming circuit in this particular model is so abnormally slow that it does cause eye strain. The lower resolution FHD display is pretty good quality and doesn't have the flicker issue, but the lower resolution is noticeable.
I would stay away from any non-business Dells. I've tried the XPS 9310 2-in-1, XPS 9700, and XPS 9500 recently and they have a bunch of quality issues. Beautiful machine for sure. I love the design and the 17" display is quite nice especially when viewing HDR content, but backlight bleed and touchpad issues are fairly common. I did two exchanges for both the 9500 and 9700 and I still found quality issues.
The HP business line like the ZBooks are fairly nice, but they are fairly noisy when the fans are running which is most of the time. Certain fan noise drives me crazy. Oddly the XPS 9700 ran it's fans quite often, but they were very quiet and of a frequency that was not annoying. HP not so much.
I understand where you are coming from and I too have a similar addiction and budget but there is no way Apple overall construction and build is any better and if not worse than most equivalent premium laptopsNot to steer the conversation too far off course, but I really disagree with this assessment. I have an unhealthy addiction to cool gadgets and notebooks in particular. I literally have an unlimited budget to buy a laptop right now and there are zero PC notebooks I would consider are of the same quality as the M1 MBP I am typing on right now. It's really unfortunate as I feel the quality overall has gone down over the years for Windows laptops. Maybe my standards are too high, but that's my real world experience. FYI, I prefer Windows over MacOS so that isn't the issue.
With that said Lenovo Thinkpads are some of the better machines, but you have to be careful which model and config you get. For example, the X1 Carbon overall is a great machine. I loved mine, but when I started to develop headaches while using it I discovered that this is a known issue. The 4K display has terrible backlight flicker when you aren't using it at 100% brightness. I've never experienced this before, but the backlight dimming circuit in this particular model is so abnormally slow that it does cause eye strain. The lower resolution FHD display is pretty good quality and doesn't have the flicker issue, but the lower resolution is noticeable.
I would stay away from any non-business Dells. I've tried the XPS 9310 2-in-1, XPS 9700, and XPS 9500 recently and they have a bunch of quality issues. Beautiful machine for sure. I love the design and the 17" display is quite nice especially when viewing HDR content, but backlight bleed and touchpad issues are fairly common. I did two exchanges for both the 9500 and 9700 and I still found quality issues.
The HP business line like the ZBooks are fairly nice, but they are fairly noisy when the fans are running which is most of the time. Certain fan noise drives me crazy. Oddly the XPS 9700 ran it's fans quite often, but they were very quiet and of a frequency that was not annoying. HP not so much.
For thermal, majority of Windows OEMs imo have better thermal than Macs. Unlike Apple, these OEMs are designing specifically for intel. Apple OTOH were dreaming up the M1 before they even released it, so the Macbooks suffer from thermal design not suitable for the intel chip. Heck, the 2020 intel Macbook Air didn't have the fan connected to anything. It's obvious that Apple was designing for the M1 in mind, and of course thermals on intel suffer. The only annoyance I have with Windows laptop designs is that they tend to have the ventilations on the bottom of the case, easily blocked when putting the laptop anywhere other than a solid surface.Some of this is a really relevant observation, one that isn't quantifiable in some benchmark or graph.
My $750 Acer Swift 3 has a CPU/case fan. Even maxxed out, it's not obtrusive in volume nor pitch.
By contrast my $1650 MacBook Air 2019 had a much louder fan and was far more annoying in both volume and pitch.
None of this show up on a spec sheet. Noise that is tolerable at one frequency might be super annoying a half octave above or below.
If an annoying fan kicks in twice as frequently as a less annoying one and they both do the job at lowering the CPU temperature, which one posts a better benchmark score?
I know a lot of computer forum participants get mighty uncomfortable when discussions drift into assessments that aren't readily quantified by simple synthetic benchmarks and measurements. But that's what the real world ownership experience is.
Yes, the Lenovo ThinkPads are absolute tanks, you get great performance, top notch build qualities and Lenovo typically has sales.General ques, not looking for a debate: is it possible to get a laptop that would rival a MacBook Air (M1, 2020) in terms of quality, performance, life cycle AND cost less than the Air?
I haven't experienced the flicker with the 4K X1 Carbon, but I did want to post an anti-recommendation for the original poster.With that said Lenovo Thinkpads are some of the better machines, but you have to be careful which model and config you get. For example, the X1 Carbon overall is a great machine. I loved mine, but when I started to develop headaches while using it I discovered that this is a known issue. The 4K display has terrible backlight flicker when you aren't using it at 100% brightness. I've never experienced this before, but the backlight dimming circuit in this particular model is so abnormally slow that it does cause eye strain. The lower resolution FHD display is pretty good quality and doesn't have the flicker issue, but the lower resolution is noticeable.
You do have a good point. I'm looking from my point of view which isn't a typical user. I switch machines measured in months rather than years so I don't even look at long term which to be fair you're on point. My wife has a 2016 MBP which just developed the display backlight issue (stage light) a few weeks ago. The issue that Apple has released a recall for on the 13" but not for the 15" like my wife has. I focus on out of the box issues which I've found typically are more obvious for PC notebooks than Macs. However, PC's don't have a monopoly on OOB issues. I went through multiple exchanges (I'm not saying exactly how many) and never did find a 16" MBP that didn't have terrible backlight uniformity / shadows issue.We are talking about mass produced things, obviously issues are possible. Even Macs are prone to issues (eg. flex cable issue, etc). But we are already way beyond the days of rickety plastic Windows laptops with sub-1080p screens. Build quality and finish wise, pretty much any of the premium ultrabooks are great. My favorites are particularly Asus Zenbook and HP Envy series, with MSi also a decent one. Dell is good, but for me they seem to be "heavier" than they look.