Apple’s chip design transforms Mac reliability
The success of Apple Silicon hardware is attributed to its simpler design, which integrates multiple components into a single chip, reducing the number of potential failure points. Additionally, Apple Silicon Macs run cooler, leading to less wear and tear on components such as batteries and USB-C ports, the report says. Across the wider laptop market, most studies show hardware faults affect one in five non-Apple machines over their first three years in use.
This builds on Apple’s enduring record for making good hardware as independent reliability surveys consistently rank the company as the most reliable laptop brand. To some extent, the data reflects the anecdotal experience most Mac users have — their computers seem to last much longer than other systems do, which helps them retain value on the second-user market.
Apple already had a good story to tell in terms of tech support before it introduced Apple Silicon machines. More than a decade ago, Fletcher Previn, then vice president of Workplace-as-a-Service at IBM, told the Jamf Nation User Conference that just 5% of IBM’s Mac-using employees needed to call the help desk; in contrast, an astonishing 40% of PC-using staff had to do so. That difference is significant because it translates into serious differences in cost; each tech support call made by those working on your ailing PC fleet has a price.
That TCO difference prompted Previn to say, “I can confidently say every Mac that we buy is making and saving IBM money.” Years later, as CIO at Cisco, he said the company’s tens of thousands of Mac users experienced five times fewer cyberthreats and nine times fewer virus issues than PCs, and that Cisco needed 33% fewer engineers to manage the Macs.
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