One thing that really gets my goat with Mac people is they seem to not blame Apple for a hardware defect. They just throw it away and happily march off to buy another one. If you are going to buy one at least pay for the warranty… you will use it.
I've been using Apples- and now Macs- since 1985 or so.
I can count on 1 hand the number of technical difficulties I've had, and those resulted from human actions (IOW, abuse):
1) A guy liked the sound my Apple IIe made when rebooting, so when he visited me, he'd turn it on and off- rapidly. This caused one drive to catch fire.
2) A young cousin of mine came over during a family gathering and was surfing around on my machine unsupervised. He managed to- against all probability- somehow download a file that contained a virus that affected Macs. I lost a lot of data and had to have some of it professionally recovered- that cost me $$$$.
That is
it.
My Dad's 15 year old Apple laptop would still function if he could get a power cord for it. Of course, its so old that about all he could do on it is play old games, but that's a different issue.
Now, I
have had some issues with peripherals. I have a pair of removable media drives- an Imation superdisk and an original Iomega Zip- that no longer function properly, but they're about 10 years old. I've also had a couple of keyboards malfunction- both non-Mac (I don't care for the ergonomics of the current Mac keyboards). And I can't say I've been pleased with Mac compatible gaming peripherals, either, but 90% of those aren't made by Apple anyway.
In contrast, many of my PC using buddies are always talking about malfunctions and the like.
However, I realize that they're also not typical users- almost all of them are programmers, so they're likely trying to push their equipment harder than the average user.