> A laptop for just €950 is bound to be crappy, have some issues, and not last very long. Or so you’d think.<p>Wow, he lives in another universe than most people :) I wonder wat the median price of laptops is, I assume the bulk of new laptops has a price between €500 and €700.
It’s amazing how the M1 Air aged, that is, not at all! I got one in a similar time and I haven’t felt the need to upgrade once.<p>I’ll never stop complaining about how macOS is a subpar experience for software development, but the hardware is still, after 4 years, unmatched. I literally can’t buy a similarly well working windows or Linux laptop.
Recently bought a random beater Lenovo Ideapad, and the screen is so bad it's giving me headaches, so there is some discernible bottom line besides the performance which admittedly is crazy nowadays measured per dollar / euro.
> I don’t need the latest and greatest. I just need a tool that works.<p>I like this mindset and I feel that I’m happier with it. It works for computers and for other gear, appliances, devices, etc too.
> With a machine this affordable, you sort of reprogram yourself to live within its boundaries.<p>Do what I can, or do what my environment let me do. There are always restrictions, some of them put by ourselves taking some compromises. But the problem of subjective definitions is that we can change them, and if then this compromise wasn't good enough it could have been costlier than making the big spending on the first place. Make sure that that change of mind worth it.