Comment by kbolino
8 hours ago
The Apple monitor will likely have better speakers, and I'm not even sure the others will have microphones at all. Apple also does a better job with color accuracy/consistency, at least historically. There's still a sizeable markup, but it's not entirely for nothing.
Back in the day (~15 years ago), when 4K monitors were unheard of and even Apple's high-end displays were still 1440p, you could get a bottom-dollar monitor using one of their panels (e.g. Yamakasi Catleap Q270) for about a third of the price. However, it came with no amenities, a single connector (dual-link DVI only), a questionably legal power cable, and no built-in scaling. The vendors, presumably to prevent refunds, even asked for your graphics card model before selling it to you, because it wouldn't work with low-end cards. Oh, and there were very few in the U.S., so you were typically getting them shipped straight from abroad, customs duties and all.
We've definitely come a long way.
Apple monitors are one of those things that are absolutely worth buying on release, but every month after that they get a worse and worse value.
After a few years, the "cheap ones" have usually caught up, if you're willing to do the research.
I disagree, the software and excellent integration in the ecosystem has always differentiated Apple and even years later models from ASUS are still headaches when it comes to everything outside the panel. Its like when gamers used to compare Apple spec by spec (ie. CPU, RAM, Disk) and valued all the software they provide at $0.
These days they still value software at $0 but the specs have become quite competitive and many times exceed what the rest of the market offers.
Sure, all I'm pointing out is the prices don't go down - so that you might as well buy as soon as they're released and get the most value.
Whereas with their laptops and almost everything else you might as well wait if you can, next year's is gonna be better and/or cheaper.