Indeed. I still remember being blown away when I first rendered a video project on my M1 MacBook Air with 16 GB of RAM. It only took one third of the time it'd take to render a very similar project in the same software (accounting for length, resolution, and effects) on my 2012 Mac Mini with 2.3 GHz quad-core i7 processor and 16 GB of RAM.
I went from a 2012 MacBook Pro to M1 Max second generation, 14" from 2021. I have the same configuration. The speed difference is night and day, until you need to do some really hard work.
A high end Intel machine will do better, but the cost trade off is about 650watts of power vs 40watt. Then the cost of an i9 or Xeon, plus dedicated graphics, etc...
You end up with a big stinking mess that's not portable, secondly while my current topcase was being repaired I looked at dedicated Windows laptops and you're still looking at less than 4hours on battery, poor build quality a machine that isn't really portable and weighs as much as a house brick, non-glass trackpads, and keyboards that feel like ****.
It reminded me of two things, half the reason why I own a Mac is its build quality, every element is thought out for ergonomics and they just feel right in your hands. Secondly if I had a choice I'd never look at a Windows login screen in my life again.
The tangibles people don't think about often when they're buying a computer is how it feels to use it, by now the Unibody design is pretty much perfect, and the OS is leagues ahead of Windows 11, and made a monumental jump with Ventura that brought it there.
The way they are merging iOS elements such as control centre elements into system preferences is really quite good as are the screensavers they are moving in from TV OS.