I think the author, as some comments mentioned already, is just complaining due to the lack of experience and knowledge on how to tune the system.<p>My story with MacOS is this: After almost 20 years of using Linux on the desktop and for work, I had to change two years ago to MacOS due to requirements of my employer (not really, I just got sick of having to use Linux “illegally” in a partition on the shitty Dell Laptop with Windows that the company provided me initially with and then my manager suggested me to get a Macbook pro).<p>It was odd at the beginning but once I got the habit and understanding on how doing things, I have to say that is so far the most reliable desktop os I have used ever. It behaves always as I expect. No ugly surprises, no desktop crashes etc.<p>The only pain points I can complain are:
- Inconsistent behaviour on maximizing/minimizing windows.<p>- Cannot change at once the wallpapers of all virtual desktops.<p>- Lack of keyboard shortcuts for certain things.<p>- Missing GNU cli tools (despite this is something that can be addresses via brew for a big part of them)<p>- The fact that you have to stick with what Apple wants you to stick with (This means, no deep customisations of the system)<p>- I personally don’t like to have the windows menu on the top bar, I prefer the per-windows approach.<p>Despite the mentioned points, I still thinking that its good things overpasses the bad.<p>(I actually ended up buying a Macbook pro for myself)