You know. I'm most critical of Apple on how Apple has !@#$ed up Mac Pro for enthusiasts. But I still admire what Apple has done with M1 for portable sector.
For a laptop, there is really no promising alternative to M1 if Mac ecosystem suits one's needs. If battery life is non issue (aka you are looking not for portable, but "portable" desktop like laptop that you always plug to wall), I guess Intel and AMD are good enough. If what you do requires Windows, there's no option, and I'm one of them also. I've decided to use multiple machines, but I know my solution is not fit for other people.
Sometimes, it's so tiresome to see people here bashing windows machines for no reason. My family member also use Surface Pro 7 with i7 and it's really a wonderful machine to use and own. I love my P1 Gen2. My personal built desktop still owns most of tasks I throw at. At the same time, I also love Apple's build quaility, and I really do enjoy my personal enclave I set up on my MBP and iMac. I wished iMac was to be Mac Pro, but Apple put **** on every enthusiasts' mouth with 7,1. I love my M1 mini that I hooked up to my TV.
All are great machines, and yes all, including windows machines, do have some minor issues. My P1 Gen2 was plagued with unstable firmware and power management issue with 9th gen Intel CPU. It had a keyboard problem where single key stroke registers as multiple strokes. After a year or so, Lenovo pretty much solved this issue. My MBP 16 still heats up too much when I connect it to a second monitor and leave a lid open. My previous intel Mac mini had bluetooth issues so I had to put a USB extension cord in addition to my hub connection in order to remedy the issue. My M1 Mini has a weird issue with monitor not waking up (not happen all the time which irritate me more). My personal built desktop is pretty much problem free except I had to flush out bad memory when building it. I pretty much has no issue with iMac 2020 running with 64 gig ram. I wish this was Mac Pro where I can add more internal storage, but oh well.
You know I rambled a lot, but all machines are good for some purpose, and I know enough that Mac are not perfect. Currently, M1 rules battery life, so on that matter, there is still fairy dust flying around, and I don't see them settled any time soon. But eventually I know this superiority will be surpassed by other competitors, and I'm glad there will be more improvement coming in all other players by raised competition Apple has set upon.