They handle memory management quite differently and the usage patterns on those devices is significantly different. You can get higher memory Apple kit if you need it…
Think different (tm). Snark aside you're right, Macs are much better at memory management than Linux, swap handling in particular. But that's a very low bar.
> the usage patterns on those devices is significantly different.
You're right, Mac users tend to run more multimedia productivity tools that benefit greatly from more RAM!
> You can get higher memory Apple kit if you need it…
You can pay the $800 premium yes, just make sure to plan what your future usage will be for the next 10 years because you can't buy it after the fact.
Most of the people buying an $800 MacBook Air or lower memory variant of an Apple device are not worried about RAM and don’t use it in such a way that it matters. Yes, if you’re a professional using a macOS device you can pay the $400 premium for the highest memory variant. You either have the money to pay it, or the product justifies the amount. They are charging what their customers are willing to pay, it’s also somewhat inflated because the cost of maintaining those less popular SKUs.
Last point I’ll make on this topic, you are going to see more CPUs move to have RAM on die because of the physical limitations on latency. Modern storage speeds are also making this a moot point as RAM may become just another caching layer for ultra fast solid state storage.
Think different (tm). Snark aside you're right, Macs are much better at memory management than Linux, swap handling in particular. But that's a very low bar.
> the usage patterns on those devices is significantly different.
You're right, Mac users tend to run more multimedia productivity tools that benefit greatly from more RAM!
> You can get higher memory Apple kit if you need it…
You can pay the $800 premium yes, just make sure to plan what your future usage will be for the next 10 years because you can't buy it after the fact.