If the user experience of an AIO works for you then you see the comparison differently. It’s not just a matter of getting what you need for the least price.
Firstly when you try comparing as I did you see the annoyance of buying a desktop then having to add all the required components allowing you to use the desktop. Unlike PC desktop towers Apple doesn’t provide you with a mouse and keyboard included. Then you have all these components you have to connect. A lot of people are fine with that.
But having used an AIO since 2001 it works for me. I like its elegance, tidiness and simplicity in tandem with doing everything I want. And it looks cool rather than being a collection of disparate components strewn across the desk.
Now in some months, perhaps Spring 2024, the Mac Mini will get M3 and that will change the comparison. An M3 Mac Mini with 24GB RAM and 1TB SSD will likely be $1799 CAN, but that doesn’t include keyboard, mouse, display and audio system. A new Studio Display would add $1999 CAN to that, a refurb would $1699. So it’s still hundreds more than the iMac. If you go with a non Apple display and such you might get it about the same as the iMac give or take a few bucks. But then we’re back to a collection of disparate components strewn across the desk.
So it’s not just a question of numbers and performance, but also how you see the whole thing.
Firstly when you try comparing as I did you see the annoyance of buying a desktop then having to add all the required components allowing you to use the desktop. Unlike PC desktop towers Apple doesn’t provide you with a mouse and keyboard included. Then you have all these components you have to connect. A lot of people are fine with that.
But having used an AIO since 2001 it works for me. I like its elegance, tidiness and simplicity in tandem with doing everything I want. And it looks cool rather than being a collection of disparate components strewn across the desk.
Now in some months, perhaps Spring 2024, the Mac Mini will get M3 and that will change the comparison. An M3 Mac Mini with 24GB RAM and 1TB SSD will likely be $1799 CAN, but that doesn’t include keyboard, mouse, display and audio system. A new Studio Display would add $1999 CAN to that, a refurb would $1699. So it’s still hundreds more than the iMac. If you go with a non Apple display and such you might get it about the same as the iMac give or take a few bucks. But then we’re back to a collection of disparate components strewn across the desk.
So it’s not just a question of numbers and performance, but also how you see the whole thing.