Yeah. I compare the device with my Dell Precision 7510.
i7-6820HQ, 16GB RAM, 1920×1080 IPS display, 256GB SM951 SSD, 2TB HDD, Quadro M2000M 4GB graphics (performance is on par with the GTX 965M gaming card). Battery life is 8.5 hours with standard use such as office, internet, video. Backlit keyboard (pretty good reviews). 5-year on-site next business day warranty. Ie, in the case of a defect before 16:00 is reported, then my laptop the next day on location. Or if necessary, replace with transfer of HDD/SSD.
The 7510 came with specs from the factory for €2500 including VAT.
I added a few real 16 GB RAM extra thrown in. If I wanted it, I had the HDD not having to grab for themselves and have a 3TB or 4TB model.
All components, except two of the memory chips, are accessible through a single cover on the bottom. The remaining two memory chips can be reached by removing the keyboard (2 screws, 5 minutes work). You can use any part replaced (except the graphics card, because you can’t buy separately). SSD, RAM, HDD, Battery, Wifi, 4G… all of it. If you have no HDD in it need it, then you can choose for a 50% larger battery so that you are more than 12 hours of battery time.
The Macbook is 500 euro more expensive with a shorter warranty, and non-replaceable components. I think that’s a high price to get OSX to be able/allowed to use. (Although I personally OSX is a nice OS find to see, and I can work with.)
[Comment amended by Katsunami on 2 december 2016 19:29]
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