sflocal said:
MacOS Sonoma has been the worst MacOS release for Intel-based machines ever. I'm still on MacOS 14.2 because each point-release update has result in bricking my 2020 iMac and my having to reinstall MacOS, and only with a USB install drive. Headlines like these makes me wonder if Apple has abandoned any real QC checks with Intel machines. For the first time ever, I'm seriously considering downgrading my iMac to macOS Monterey as it was completely stable.It's a disgrace in my book. Apple really dropped the ball here.
I would guess Intel machines are considered legacy now for Apple. Even though they never say this out loud, various comments when the first M3 machines were released were speaking a clear language - get off of Intel. So in the list of priorities it falls down fast.
Last but not least, Apple moved from making 'insanely great' products to 'making money' as their internal priority (aka Apple has become 'insanely boring' these days). With 'iPhone growth' having reached it's natural ceiling (aka there are just not enough people with enough money on hand), it boils down to saving money, by reducing legacy support (Intel), by dropping innovative technologies (MicroLED, Car), by filching customers (subscription models, ad's galore in the App Store, that everybody is forced to use, etc).
The bean-counter CEO Tim Cook has run out of ideas that remained from the Steve Jobs area and goes the way of others (like Boeing sacrificing quality on the altar of shareholder value).
Yes there is the Vision Pro thingy, but that likely takes years to take off (if ever) ... then again it's introduction was proof of my thesis. There is simply no 'killer app' for that thing and it's introduction was very boring, no 'oh wow' moment like we had several on the introductions of the first iPod or the first iPhone. I have serious doubts about Apple's innovation machine these days and certainly hope the next CEO will be a product guy again instead of a bean counter.