this post was submitted on 28 Oct 2023
306 points (98.4% liked)
Technology
59574 readers
3262 users here now
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Our Rules
- Follow the lemmy.world rules.
- Only tech related content.
- Be excellent to each another!
- Mod approved content bots can post up to 10 articles per day.
- Threads asking for personal tech support may be deleted.
- Politics threads may be removed.
- No memes allowed as posts, OK to post as comments.
- Only approved bots from the list below, to ask if your bot can be added please contact us.
- Check for duplicates before posting, duplicates may be removed
Approved Bots
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Apple's laptop segments have been decreasing massively since their switch to custom chips, actually. Could just be timing, or could be that people don't want the hassle.
https://www.macrumors.com/2023/10/18/kuo-macbook-sales-down-amid-no-new-products/
Probably becuase people bought new Mac’s in 2020 and don’t feel like upgrading.
https://www.macrumors.com/2020/10/30/apple-says-strong-mac-sales-led-by-macbook-pro/
They swapped to M series chips, what, two years ago? This says sales this year are down due to no new Macs.
Hassle?
Not everything runs on MacOS with Arm. Some people may not upgrade to M* class chips, and others who may have switched don't want the hassle. I know plenty of developers who went to ThinkPads on Linux instead upgrading to M* architecture and having build issues.
Plenty of developers? Ok, sure. It was rocky for less than a year after they released the M1’s. I barely had any issues on my M1 Max that I got at release and I was just thinking the other day about how in haven’t thought about “will this run” or “oh there’s that thing that doesn’t run” in forever.
Yeah, it really hasn’t been a hassle. At my workplace (software research, lots of which is actually x86-specific) many people have switched to Apple silicon Macs and nobody is looking back. The only issue I’ve noticed that is disruptive in any way is that Apple isn’t really supporting TAP based network adapters which causes trouble once in a while, mostly with certain vpn configurations. Standard development tools like IDEs, compilers, etc have worked since nearly day 1. Basically the only common targets that I wouldn’t develop for is Windows, but even then you can do it in a VM and it’s the fastest way to run windows on ARM still.
There's a lot of brew packages that messed up when the chips came out. It's still a bit of an issue two years later.
The M1 series was super good and Apple just hasn’t released anything since then worth upgrading to if you have an M1. They’re gaining market share though slowly, which indicates that their sales slump is lower than the market average.
Their selling points for the previous generation are now moot though, so that's why people aren't buying or re-upoing generations:
There's just tons of stuff that makes it unattractive to developers. My particular job requires building multi-arch containers and binaries, and it's just a nightmare to dev and test locally. The argument to this point might be "just use cloud", or "use a remote CI build system", bit the point is you shouldn't have to. I can have a machine that does everything I need it to do with another vendor, with way less hassle, and for way cheaper.
I don’t know exactly what software you use for work, but for simple cases docker desktop uses binfmt-misc to enable Rosetta and qemu-user for containers. This actually makes it really easy to build and test for a bunch of different architectures, x86 but also ppc64le, mips, etc. With x86-64 specifically you get Rosetta for very high performance. I know tools like gdb don’t work right in this environment, but thats not usually part of a typical ci/cd system anyways.
Quick responses, sorry.
In general, the "use containers for everything" is not a good workflow. It's also very subjective to performance on the platform you run it on. Containers all the time is exhausting and problematic for a number of different reasons.
Lol! No.
Gaming: has just jumped up in a huge way in the last couple of months. The software that's come out recently is amazing. Just run full windows games on your macbook pro? Sure.
Creators: huh? Never heard of this before. Everything seems to run amazingly well.
GPU: except for the local ai stuff that is being done all the time? What? Diffusion Bee doesn't exist now?
Cheaper: well, yeah. Heh. You get that one, for sure. But if money is no object, then... 🤷
Bruh...there is NOTHING about MacOS which invites the ability to run "full windows on your MacBook". I'm not sure form of Bath Salts you're smoking, but you should share that with the rest of the fanboys so they can experience the same delusions as you. Also "gaming has jumped up...in the last couple of months"...jFC those drugs you're on are amazing.
All your other points make zero sense, and it's obvious you are not experienced in software development, so you can go away from me now.
I said "full windows games", but yeah, you can also run Windows on it, but that's old news.
Crossover and GTPK. Look it up. Didn't exist like it does now at the start of the year.
Be careful in trying to interpret year over year statistics. Last year was huge for Apple as if you look at Q3 2022 then Apple increased sales 10% while the rest of the PC market dropped a massive 18%.
You're saying "since switching from x86 to ARM apples sales are down! see it was a bad idea!" but actually they have been way way up and are just finally getting inline with the sales decline the rest of the PC industry has had after the covid work from home rush ended.