Not really. Up until their 16/18" models, Razer offers great quality and Mac like prices (their latest entries exceed that of Mac prices). Asus, Acer, MCI, Lenovo, Dell, and I think even Samsung now offers windows machines. These all are highly rated, well crafted machines that offer just as good quality, beautiful designs and typically prices that are cheaper then what Apple charges.
There's always a catch with them. For example several models I looked at had reviews complaining about problems with heat or fan noise. For some models, only certain displays get good reviews. It gets tiring trying to figure out which model to get.
Agreed, the world has changed, you cannot just walk down to your local book store and peruse a section looking for something to tickle your fancy. The world has evolved and not for the better. There's always best buy, but if I were to use them, its strictly to see what's available.
If you have a Microcenter near you, that is the outlier, you have many machines out on display, helpful staff and decent pricing.
To a large extent you can still do this with Apple. Walking into an Apple store is a relatively predictable experience, compared to walking into a Best Buy with no idea what they will have on the floor on any given day.
I gotta say bloatware is not a big problem anymore. Except for the older established makers, HP, Dell its not a big problem. Cleaning it up is the very nature trivial. People have always recommend whether PC or Mac, to reformat and reinstall the OS. Doing that takes maybe 10 to 20 minutes and its generally just a matter of clicking through a series of prompts.
I have to disagree. I was researching the HP Dragonfly G3 and the first review on Notebookcheck complains about bloatware. And there were other posts I found (maybe elsewhere) that said removing certain bloatware can mess with BIOS settings and start impacting things like heat and fan noise.
Yes and no, I think if you're looking at a class of machines such as ROG Zephyrus G15, you'll get reviews and you can customize it a bit or find slight configuration differences. Nothing really different then customizing apple with more CPU/GPU cores, or more ram, or more storage. You don't see reviews for every permutation for macs do you?
There are many YouTube channels (e.g Max Tech) that run comparisons of 8GB vs 16GB or M1 vs M1 Pro, etc. It's almost impossible to find something like that for Windows laptops. The number of reviews of a particular Windows model on YouTube can usually be counted on one hand if you're lucky to even find one.
For the uninitiated I suppose it could but I also think people read way too into a complexity that just isn't there. There are sites like pcworld and pc centric social platforms that can be helpful. True its not as much like MR, but overall its not a lonley wilderness where you cannot get help. Reddit is a huge resource where you'll get advice and help that exceeds the size, depth and breadth of MR
The signal to noise ratio on reddit is very low, and again it's going to be hard to find someone with exactly your configuration. While that is trivial with Macs.
Macs are by no means perfect, but if you're willing to put up with Apple, then the shopping and ownership experience cannot be matched.
Admittedly, I'm coming at this as an ultrabook user. Anything over 3 lb is not of interest, so the machines I've been focused on are all 12-13" and 2-3 lb. In the case of Apple, that means only the Air. If there a laptop on the Windows side without a fan, I didn't find it.
Brands (systems) I looked at:
Dell (7300 and 9300 Latitude), HP (Dragonfly G3), Lenovo (X1 Nano), Microsoft (Surface Laptop Go 2 and Surface Laptop 5), Vaio (SX 12). From what I read, Samsung loads their systems with unnecessary apps to work with their phones.
Probably the biggest draws for me on the Windows side was I could find lighter options (several options for 13" in 2-2.5 lb), matte displays, and the 3:2 form factor that some systems now offer.