I’ve mentioned it before that my last high margin desktop was my 2010 Mac Pro. My last new Mac period was my 2013 MacBook Air. My current iPhone is a 6 plus. Apple is losing this core foundation of customers who were once easy to sell their high margin products to because executives dropped the ball with continuing to make compelling products the meet the diverse needs of these folks. The real impact of this won’t be felt for at several years though (latent effects).
Bean counters seemed to have looked at the decreasing sales of PC’s (in general) and decided that the Mac (all form factors) upgrade cycle should be extended. Intel isn’t always the hold up either (for lack of appropriate chips) because the entire form over function design obsession has often times put Apple into a thermal dead end resulting in compromises when it comes to ports, parts (processor family plus namely reduction in discrete GPU’s that can be used), and going back to soldering components like RAM just to achieve that 1 or 2mm reduction in thinness. Like everything else, there are diminishing returns to the point where functionality is going to come at the expense of form.
I had one of those “unibody” styled Mac mini’s from 2009 that ended up overheating resulting in disk failure. I have a unibody 13″ MacBook Pro with the bulging battery (common issue) that has warped the casing to where the screen lid cannot be closed. My 2013 11″ MacBook Air had a bulging battery develop 3 years in (also causing the case to bulge where the screen no longer closed flush) but I quickly bought an original replacement off of eBay and replaced it. That is part of the “price” for thinness and the tight tolerances involved. Fortunately, my iPhones have all been issue free along with my Mac Pro (which has the airflow needed where its design did not back it into a thermal dead end like the 2013 model).