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.

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.

Liquid Glass, Tahoe, and the New Apple Era

I’ve been diving into macOS 26 Tahoe these past weeks, and one thing stands out: Liquid Glass. Apple’s new UI treatment makes the system feel alive in a way that’s both modern and familiar. It’s sleek, it’s smooth, and it finally feels like the Mac is getting the kind of visual polish that belongs in 2025.

That said, I can’t help but think it could go even further. Imagine deeper shadows under buttons, more depth in layered elements, and just a bit more “glass” in the glass. The foundation is brilliant, but there’s room to push it from “great” to “stunning.”

Spotlight deserves a mention too. The new version isn’t just an upgrade—it’s a complete reinvention. It’s so good that I’ve actually stopped using Raycast. Fast, powerful, and tightly integrated into the system, it feels like the Mac finally has the universal launcher it always deserved.

On the iPad side, iPadOS 26 is exactly what many of us have been waiting for. For the first time, it feels less like a mobile device with extras and more like a true computer in its own right. Real multitasking, pro-level apps, and the flexibility to actually replace a laptop in day-to-day workflows.

And then there’s iOS 26. Clean, refined, and surprisingly elegant. Some people have complained about readability, but honestly, I don’t see the issue. Maybe it’s not the typography—maybe it’s time for an eye exam.

Apple’s new OS lineup feels like the start of a fresh chapter. The glass is here. The only question is how much further Apple will let it shine.

From Raids to UI: Why WoW Feels Right at Home on Mac

I keep hearing the same tired complaint on tech podcasts, forums, and random YouTube rants: “You can’t really game on a Mac.” Honestly, that narrative is getting old. I’ve been playing World of Warcraft on my MacBook Pro and iMac for years, and the experience has always been excellent.

Let’s be clear: the modern MacBook, especially with Apple Silicon, is more than capable of handling WoW. The game runs smoothly, looks fantastic, and integrates seamlessly with the rest of my setup. I don’t need to tweak endlessly with drivers or worry about sudden crashes that used to plague me back when I played on Windows. It just works — which is what you actually want when sitting down for a raid night.

Another point worth mentioning: macOS Tahoe. The new OS is not only stable but brings a fresh sense of polish to the whole experience. The Liquid Glass UI in particular is stunning — subtle, modern, and surprisingly immersive even when just alt-tabbing between WoW and my other apps. 

Yes, you can absolutely play on a Mac. The myth that Macs are bad for gaming is outdated, mostly repeated by people who haven’t tried it in years. Is it the platform for every PC game ever made? No. However, if your main title is World of Warcraft, a MacBook offers a combination of performance, reliability, and elegance that makes the experience not only viable but enjoyable.

Stop listening to the noise — try it yourself.

Snow Leopard

Snow leopards are among the most elusive big cats on Earth, roaming the high mountains of Central Asia with quiet strength. Their thick, spotted coats make them masters of camouflage in snow and rock. Apple once honored this rare predator by naming its 2009 operating system Mac OS X Snow Leopard, highlighting both the animal’s grace and the company’s focus on refinement over change. Just as the snow leopard thrives in one of the harshest environments, the OS was built to run with power and efficiency beneath a polished surface.

EU, Apple and Users

Hey there, fellow EU citizens and Mac lovers! We’re all feeling the heat of Apple’s ongoing drama with the European Union over the Digital Markets Act (DMA). It’s affecting our daily lives, with some of our favourite iOS 26 and macOS features being held back in the EU. Think iPhone Mirroring on Mac, SharePlay screen sharing, and Live Activities—all gone for now! Apple says that following the DMA to the letter could mess with our privacy and security, especially if we’re forced to use rival platforms. On the other hand, the App Store is changing, with complicated commission tiers and limited payment options. This could mean fewer apps available or higher prices. The EU wants us to have freedom and open competition, but for now, we’re stuck with delays, restrictions, and a mixed bag of experiences. It’s a real head-scratcher, and we’re all waiting to see what happens next. Stay tuned for more updates as the legal and regulatory battles continue!