I've been 'borrowing' one of work's 14" MBP (M1MAX) laptops at home for the past week and it's a very impressive piece of equipment - speaking as somebody who has long used Macs so I'm used to the extra effort Apple put into their computers, i.e. providing good quality screens and decent(ish) audio. I'm not sure I'm quite ready to spring that much money on a new laptop for myself but it feels like very few compromises were made.
Stupid fast, lasts forever and even things like plugging in an external monitor is just instant. The most intensive work I personally do is transcoding ripped Blu-ray disc moves to to H.265 (HEVC) and it's stupid fast compared to my Ryzen 9 5900HS, or any of my desktops including hardware-accelerated Nvidia 3080 transcodes.
I'm really curious what they can delivery in the next gen MacBook Air.
A family member got the M1 max (32core) yesterday, thing just oozes quality, from the screen, the keyboard, trackpad and in special the audio system, easily the best audio from any laptop so far ive ever heard. How they got so much audio quality and volume in a small laptop, something other manufacturers really need to take note on. its a whole-day on-battery pc, you could charge it over-night, take it work, use it all day, go home and use it again untill you charge it overnight again.
From an energy-perspective i can see why companies would invest in those, employees wouldnt even have to bring their chargers in most cases.
I dont do any video encoding or content creation etc, but its a fast machine, hardly gets warm and its silent for most of the time. Impressive machine and something Intel/AMD/NV etc really should improve on.
Its not for me (windows user, gamer), but for work-environments its a must-have, the larger the company the larger the savings on just energy consumption alone.
The screen btw, its a notch brighter then the GE66 (my gaming laptop), not as saturated though, but probably more accurate. Used crystalmark for the first time, their both ultra fast in IO speeds.