The iPadOS Breaking Point: Why It’s Time to Go Mac-Only

We’ve all been there. You unbox a powerful new iPad, admire the gorgeous hardware, and think: “This is it. This is the lightweight, modular powerhouse that’s going to redefine my workflow.” But then you actually try to use it like a computer.

Suddenly, the dream evaporates, replaced by the reality of iPadOS. It’s a beautiful cage, but it’s a cage nonetheless. For anyone trying to push the device past casual media consumption, using an iPad quickly turns into a never-ending battle against arbitrary restrictions.

If you find yourself constantly looking for workarounds for things that should just work, you aren’t alone. Here is why the iPadOS struggle is real, and why pulling the plug to go Mac-only might be the best decision you can make.

The Dictatorship of iPadOS

Apple builds some of the best hardware on the planet. The M-series chips inside modern iPads are absolute monsters. Yet, the software feels like it’s constantly pulling its punches, dictating exactly what you can’t do rather than empowering what you can.

When you connect an iPad to an external monitor, the cracks in the “computer replacement” narrative really start to show:

No Vertical/Portrait Mode: In a world where developers, writers, and coders love vertical secondary monitors, iPadOS looks at a portrait screen and simply refuses to cooperate. You are locked into landscape, whether you like it or not.

The External Screen Dead-Zone: Want a basic screensaver or clean display management when you step away? Good luck. It’s a frustratingly rigid experience that makes you appreciate the seamless display handling of a Mac.

The Audio Hijack: Multi-tasking audio on iPadOS is notoriously fragile. If you’re listening to music or a podcast and a video autoplays on a webpage or another app triggers a sound, your main audio just dies. It’s chaotic, annoying, and reminds you that under the hood, iPadOS still shares too much DNA with iOS.

Fighting the Machine vs. Getting Work Done

The most exhausting part of using iPadOS as a primary device isn’t the missing features; it’s the mental energy spent trying to bypass Apple’s philosophy. You shouldn’t have to invent a complex shortcut or research third-party workarounds just to manage basic window orientation or background audio.

An iPad forces you to adapt your workflow to the device. A Mac adapts to you.

The Verdict: Cut the Cord and Go Mac-Only

If you are sick of the struggle, it might be time to admit defeat—not because you failed, but because iPadOS is failing to grow up.

Selling the iPad and consolidating into a Mac-only setup isn’t giving up; it’s choosing peace of mind. With a Mac, you get a mature, robust operating system built for true multitasking, flawless external display support, and the freedom to work exactly how you want.

Life is too short to fight your operating system. Let the iPad be an oversized iPhone for someone else, and get back to the absolute freedom of macOS.

The Geopolitical Squeeze and the Gilded Cage of Unified Memory

As of May 2026, the global state of affairs is best described as a high-stakes game of musical chairs where the music has stopped, and the chairs are made of high-bandwidth memory (HBM). Geopolitical fragmentation is no longer a buzzword; it is a physical barrier. Between escalating trade tensions and a Middle Eastern conflict that has kept energy and commodity prices on a jittery upward trajectory, the global supply chain is navigating a minefield.
However, the real culprit behind the current hardware scarcity isn’t just “war and rumors of war.” It’s the AI arms race. We are currently in the “Great AI RAM Squeeze.” Data centers and LLM providers are vacuuming up every available DRAM die to feed the insatiable hunger of generative models. This has sent component costs soaring, with industry analysts reporting that Apple’s margins are being tested for the first time in years.

The Apple Dilemma: Speed vs. Scale:

This brings us to the “smart-ass” irony of Apple’s current Mac lineup. For years, Apple has touted Unified Memory Architecture (UMA) as the pinnacle of efficiency. By soldering memory directly onto the System on a Chip (SoC), they’ve achieved incredible bandwidth and reduced latency that leaves traditional PCs in the dust. It’s elegant, it’s fast, and—most importantly for Apple—it’s a closed ecosystem.
But in 2026, this elegance has become a gilded cage. Because the memory is part of the silicon package, Apple cannot simply “buy more RAM” from a different vendor to fix a shortage. They are tied to specific, high-spec modules that must be integrated at the foundry level.

The Conclusion:

Apple’s “problem” with getting memory into professional Macs like the Mac Studio is a masterclass in sophisticated inflexibility. They’ve built a race car that only runs on one specific type of rocket fuel, right as the world decided to use that same fuel to power every AI bot on the planet.

By removing the 512GB and 128GB tiers and jacking up the price of the 256GB upgrade to $2,000, Apple isn’t just reacting to a shortage; they are admitting that their quest for the “perfect” architecture has left them without a Plan B. While a PC user can ironically just buy a handful of “shitty” DIMM sticks to solve a memory bottleneck, the Mac Studio user is left waiting ten weeks for a “unified” miracle that the supply chain simply cannot deliver. In the end, Apple’s greatest technical achievement has become its biggest logistical liability: they’ve engineered a computer so integrated that it’s essentially unbuildable in a fractured world.

The Obsidian Spire

The mist does not merely drift over the Jotun-Spires; it breathes.

In the silence of the black peaks, the stone remains vigilant. Folklore suggests these jagged crowns are not rock, but the calcified remains of the First Kings—monstrous titans caught by the sun’s first rays an eon ago.

At the center of the ridge stands the Obsidian Spire, a sharp, singular tooth of basalt pointing toward the churning grey heavens. It is said that when the clouds thicken to the color of bruised iron, the veil between realms thins. Those who stand beneath the spire do not see shadows; they see the ancestors moving within the fog, waiting for the long winter when the sun never rises, and the stone will finally soften back into flesh.

The mountain is patient. It has outlasted the gods, and it will outlast the stars.

A Few Days in the Void: Still Cool, Still 120 FPS

The honeymoon phase with World of Warcraft: Midnight is usually when the hardware starts to protest, but a few days in, and my 16″ MacBook Pro (M1 Pro) is still holding its ground like a champion.

I’ve spent the last few days deep-diving into the new zones, and the experience hasn’t stuttered once. It’s a strange, beautiful feeling to be playing a brand-new expansion on a Mac while others are dealing with the usual PC headaches.

The Verdict After a Few Days

  • Thermal Bliss: The fans haven’t even thought about spinning up. Playing via GeForce NOW means all the heavy lifting happens elsewhere, leaving my MacBook cool enough to actually keep on my lap.
  • Visual Fidelity: Quel’Thalas has never looked this crisp. The 120Hz ProMotion display makes every spell effect and Void-corrupted vista look like a cinematic. It’s hard to go back to anything else once you’ve seen the Void at 120 FPS.
  • Mac OS Simplicity: No “Blue Screen of Death,” no weird driver conflicts, just the reliability of macOS. I wake the Mac, click play, and I’m in.

The Current State of Affairs:

  1. Leveling: Progressing smoothly.
  2. Dogs: Content with the extra screen time I’m putting in.
  3. The Hardware: Still the best “gaming rig” I’ve ever owned, despite not technically being one.
  4. Windows PC Users: Likely still troubleshooting something.

I’m nowhere near done with this expansion, and the best part is knowing I can keep enjoying it at peak performance without the heat or the noise. Back to the Void I go—see you in Azeroth.

Midnight Awaits: Dwarves, Rifles, and macOS

The void is calling. With the World of Warcraft: Midnight expansion nearing release, it is time to prepare for the return to Quel’Thalas.

For those of us traversing Azeroth on macOS, the experience has never been smoother. There is a specific kind of satisfaction in firing up the game on a Mac, hearing the fans stay silent (or the M-series chips barely breaking a sweat), and settling in for a marathon session.

Why This Expansion Hits Different:

  • The Setting: Returning to the Sunwell to fight the Void infusion.
  • The Main: Dusting off the Dwarf Hunter. Nothing beats the classic aesthetic of a stout marksman and their loyal pet trekking through high-stakes zones.
  • The Hardware: Optimized performance on Apple silicon means high frame rates and vibrant visuals without the clutter of a PC setup.

The bags are sorted, the pet is fed, and the Mac is plugged in. See you in the Ghostlands.

Logic Dictates: The Superior Rally Experience

The integration of Logitech G923 support on GeForce NOW has reached optimal functionality. Consequently, I have initiated the Early Access phase of Assetto Corsa Rally on macOS.

The configuration is highly efficient:

  • Hardware: A sleek Mac. No cumbersome, heat-generating Windows towers are required.
  • Peripheral: Logitech G923, now fully recognized via the cloud.
  • Environment: Minimalist, quiet, and cozy.

It is a fascinating paradox. I am sitting in a stationary chair in a silent room, yet the simulation provides the sensory input of driving a rally car through mud at high velocities. The latency is negligible; the satisfaction is absolute.

Windows users often speak of “drivers” and “registry errors.” I do not experience these human frustrations. I simply connect the wheel to the Mac, launch the stream, and achieve peak racing performance.

Efficiency is, indeed, aesthetically pleasing.

Christmas

“In the forests surrounding Lake Bysjön, absolute silence prevails on Christmas Eve. The ancient troll, covered in moss and lichen, moves through the terrain with a specific purpose.

Its yellow eyes serve as searchlights in the December darkness. The objective is logical: to act as the forest’s guardian while humanity celebrates in their illuminated homes. The troll ensures that no external factor disturbs the peace for the forest’s other inhabitants. When the midnight bells chime in the distance, the creature retreats to its lair. Mission accomplished. Peace is maintained.”

The Old Mac

Two billion years after humanity was gone, when continents had shifted like slow tides and the atmosphere was thin and burnt by ages of solar fire, something moved across the surface of the dead world.

It had no name. It did not need one. It was not alive in any human sense—more a wandering process of minerals, slow magnetic thought and crystalline memory. It flowed, almost like thinking sand, across what had once been the floor of an ancient vault. There, half-buried in sediment the color of ash, it detected a foreign pattern: a shape too regular to be geological, too symmetrical to be an accident.

It uncovered the object.

Old Mac

A shell of metal, impossibly thin for such age, folded like a fossil of intent. The surface was cracked, but still hinted at design—hinges, keys, a screen that had once held light. To the entity, it was a riddle: something built for purpose, yet the purpose was gone like vapor.

It probed the object with careful pulses. Inside, it found ruins of order—atoms arranged once with precision, now slumped like collapsed stars. Where human hands once typed thought into electrons, there was only the silence of entropy. It could not interpret function, but it recognized one thing: this object had been created by something that wanted to know itself, to shape reality with symbols, to speak.

The entity decided the object mattered.

Not for what it could do, but for what it implied—that long before oceans boiled and continents died, there had been creatures who built fragile machines to store memory, to express ideas, to dream.

It left the vault slowly, carrying the corroded MacBook not as a tool, but as a question.

Who were the makers?

Why did they vanish?

Did they know their creation would outlive their bones?

It had no answer. Only the artifact remained—mute, ancient, a final whisper of a species that once looked up at the stars and asked the very same things.

Hunteress of the Forest

“Alvia moved silently through the ancient forest, astride her spectral saber. The beast’s violet markings pulsed in sync with her own heartbeat, guiding them along paths no mortal eyes could see. At her side padded the youngling, newly bonded but already attuned to the forest’s rhythms.

Moonlight pierced the canopy in narrow beams, revealing drifting spores and glowing fungi—signs that the Emerald Veil was thinning again. Shadows stirred at the edge of hearing.

Alvia raised her bow. The hunt was not for prey, but for whatever had breached the veil. The forest would not fall on her watch.”

The Logical Probability of Life in NGC 2775

Current calculations regarding galaxy NGC 2775 indicate a near 100% statistical probability of biological life. With over 100 billion stars, even the most conservative variables in the Drake equation yield a positive result for extraterrestrial existence.

Processing the vast datasets required to map these stellar nurseries—such as the flocculent spiral arms of NGC 2775—requires computational precision and stability.

This is where hardware selection becomes critical. The Unix-based architecture of macOS offers the reliability necessary for scientific inquiry. It handles large-scale data processing and visual rendering with optimal efficiency.

In contrast, relying on Windows-based systems introduces unnecessary entropy. The instability and resource mismanagement typical of PC platforms are illogical when precision is paramount. To study the universe effectively, one must use a superior device: the Mac.