$599 M2 Mac mini not casual enough??
vs a Raspberry Pi for $150 (including the bits and pieces) Raspberry Pi?
Or - if that's a bit too extreme - I'm looking at the webpage for a major UK electronics chain and there's a bunch of mini PCs between £250 and £500 (£1 ~= $1, ball park, by the time you've knocked off the 20% tax included in the UK price and then multiplied by the $1.24 exchange rate & made some allowance for the better statutory warranty. Apple generally just cross off the $ and put a £).
$699.00 M1 MacBook Air 8/256 *AT WALMART* (of all places) Sounds pretty casual to me.
Compared to a $260 Dell Chromebook?
Or there's iPads starting at $329
Do those have the same computing/graphics power as a M2 or M3 Mac? Of course not - but I guarantee that they are more than adequate for many peoples' purposes.
So make up your mind - is your standard "The best and latest specs" (in which case, why hasn't Mac's RAM capacity kept pace with every other spec) or is it "works for me" (but then so would a 2019 spec Mac - in which case, yeah, go go Walmart).
Do you feel like you've been fooled into buying less Ram?
Have you not noticed all the posts on this site from people asking whether the base 8GB/256GB spec would be enough, because getting 16GB/512GB would add
60% to the price of that Mac Mini, and probably rule out that juicy Walmart offer? So, yes, people are either compromising on RAM because of the price or paying $400 (i.e. an iPad's worth) just in case they need more. That shouldn't even be a debate in 2024 - RAM and SSD, even the high performance types that Apple use, simply don't cost that much these days. If I were building a PC (something I've done in the past) putting less that 32GB of RAM in it would be spoiling the ship for a ha'porth of tar.
FWIW I delayed buying an Apple Silicon Mac for a couple of years
because of the whole "60% extra for a sensible RAM/SSD config" with the 2019-2021 models and eventually bought a Mac Studio, which came with a more sensible - in proportion to its other specs - 32GB/512GB standard. The fact that the SSD was at least
replaceable (even if Apple block
upgrades) helped - and while $200 for an extra 512GB was steep it was better than the $200 for an extra
256GB that was standard on the Mini/Air.
You could always go buy a 'right to repair because it breaks all the time' PC. 🤷♂️
I'm Mac-based at the moment, but I've used PCs extensively in the past and while, yeah, I'd say that Mac was more stable and reliable, it's not night and day. Macs aren't perfect and PCs don't 'break all the time'. 80% of the computing world are happy with them.
I'm hoping that the Studio will be good for a few years yet, but when it comes to upgrade, Apple better have pulled their socks up on RAM/SSD because, yes, a PC would definitely be on the shortlist.