Use it for 3650 days at 12 hour daily at over 40,000 hours and it is time to retire it or sell it to a collector.
My argument (with myself) is that the $1500 (discount price)
ASD is not really expensive if one uses it for 10 years. The price works out to about 50 cents a day, and very few things a person buys these days cost less than 50 cents.
I see people buying (
and probably done weekly) $20 bottles of liquor/wine every time I'm at the grocery store. I walk by the local gasoline station and see some big SUV filling up - an $80 to $100 purchase (
and probably done weekly.) If you want to go to a cinema with a friend that will set you back more than $20 to just get you into the door.
Long term use of a computing device is really the answer. Doing that and the product will in reality not have cost you much at all over a decade.
Apple has successfully (and this started way back in the beginning) positioned itself as an
aspirational brand. Apple computers are one of the few electronics that you can buy that still offer the old-fashioned idea of proper customer service.
All these people whining about Apple prices don't seem to understand that Apple does not sell computer chips, or display parts, etc. Apple is a system integrator that offers
solutions (as some of the older computer companies liked to say) for customers in need of a product.
And I get it - those of you who are really attached to your 27" iMacs are now noting that if the only solution to your need for an automated calculating device is another 27" AIO, then
Apple simply does not offer that solution for you. (Note: HP does, if you really think a 27" AIO is the hill to die upon.)
For two months now I've been shopping... and reading... and shopping some more. I've had to accept that I need to spend more money than I had originally hoped. But I am buying for products to last me a decade, and I still believe, given all the evidence, that if I pony up for Apple separates that I can indeed make them last a decade. (Note: I'm currently typing this on a 2008 iMac.)
Also FWIW: even in the Windows world it is becoming evident that people want small, quiet, and not-ugly machines. The PC-case market has for a while now been filled with design ideas, some of them verging on Mac-esque. A Geekom box with a Meteor Lake board is likely to be quieter than their current offerings (fan noise is a common complaint with their current Intel offerings), faster, and sort of energy efficient (not to the extent of a Mac, though.) Bottom line: there are plenty of options out there for those who look.