Why Apple's move from Intel to ARM means we should stop buying Macs
pcworld.comSummary: The Author's contention is that Apple will abandon support for it's existing lineup sooner rather than later based on the history of it's prior platform transition to intel. So, why bother buying a Mac now when it's going to be abandoned sooner rather than later.
Apple supported other transitions nicely, and for a reasonable time. That prior history was reasonable.
They have little to gain by not doing exactly that again.
Last time it was 3 years to obsolescence at a time CPUs sped up by a factor of 2. This time you will be switching to slower CPUs and maybe reaching 1.5x in 3 years.
The difference being plenty of Intel options available.
Past performance doesn’t predict future returns, as they say.
Losing OS support in Apple-land isn’t the end of the road. There are an additional two years of software updates because the previous two versions retain maintenance support. Also, apps rarely require the latest macOS to function.
Meanwhile, the iPhone 6s is getting iOS 14. The App Store works fine on an iPhone 5s. iOS 9 got a security update last year, and iOS 12 got one this year.
My concern is more of how apples walled garden will be applied to the new form factors.