^ Apple is a bastard in some ways, I agree (I've also never liked the company and its habits). The two worst parts for me are: iTunes which is and has always been total crap; the lightening connector on iPhones (for that reason I sold my iPhone 8 and got a Samsung Note 9 with a nice USB-C and a 3.5mm headphone jack.
But, where Apple excels is hardware/software integration with the result that everything is just smoother. When I turn on a Mac it's fully operational within 10-12 seconds while a Microsoft machine takes at least a minute and often much much longer (the times when I'm busy, need to get straight to work, turn a MS machine on then it auto updates for 5, 10, 20, who knows how long, minutes really drives me to raging anger...

). To some degree that's not Microsoft's fault because they have to work across a very wide range of hardware implementations...
Nonetheless, I personally found that changing to a Mac has seriously improved my workflow and state of mind (as Kerry says, the ability to control updates is really nice).
Edit to add: all my work computers run Microsoft Windows, and the university uses Google Apps (because they are free...) for email communication, file storage, etc. Over the last 18 months I produced several hundred documents in Word, .PDF and Google docs (as well as the crappy Google PPT program) for work (excluding my own stuff which is mainly Word, Outlook, Chrome/Safari, and stuff like Python editors, etc) and most of the time I sat at my office computer running Windows and just used my Macbook - worked flawlessly. In my work situation they do not update and manage the s/w because our IT department are somewhere between useless and non-existent, so obviously badly attended Microsoft operating systems become terrible; less so if well looked after... I noticed that Macs had less problems running and converting documents into/out of Google docs than the Microsoft machines had - this may be Googles fault rather than Microsoft's, but it was very noticeable.
When I had an iPhone 8, taking pictures with it then seeing them (almost) instantly on my Macbook was great. But, when I sold the iPhone it was a bit of a learning curve dealing with iTunes and non-Apple devices. I tended to use a USB-C or bluetooth to send pictures across from one device to another - I don't like iTunes at all, for music or photos or payments, and I have turned the iCloud off on all my devices... Instead I have a small SSD running as a backup (Apple has a pre-installed app called TimeMachine, it's automatic and excellent). Also, I use my Microsoft account as my cloud service - thus, Microsoft works seamlessly with Macs nowadays.
The irritating area to me, similar to Sp8ctre, is iTunes and iPhones, so I don't use either. I'm sure it can be done, but I just found it frustrating and worked out a different way (no iPhone, no iTunes and no iCloud [having said that, iCloud and Airdrop, which is their local form of Bluetooth delivery between Apple devices, do work very well...). Right, I'll shut up now...
