As others have mentioned, a machine that costs $2,000 should AT LEAST have a faster storage drive (at least on-par with the WD SN770/Samsung 990 Pro or better), a stock/base config display calibrated to 96%+ DCI-P3 coverage if not an OLED touchscreen, and probably 3 years of Accidental Damage Protection or the "Pro Support" upgrade included alongside the complimentary 36-month manufacturer warranty.
But if there's one justification of value for splurging two grand on this: having
2-3 working days of battery life on tap while still being a Windows machine.
Compared to other models on the Battery Life Leaderboard*:
- [55Wh] Dell XPS 13 9345 @ 1,575 minutes or 26.25 hours
- [60Wh] Dell Pro 13 Premium @ 1,440 minutes or 24 hours
- [58Wh] Thinkpad T14s Gen 6 Qualcomm @ 1349 minutes or just over 22.25 hours
- [55Wh] Dell XPS 13 9350 @ 1,236 minutes or just over 20.5 hours
- [99.6Wh] M3 Pro Macbook Pro 16 2023 @ 1204 minutes or just over 20 hours
- [99.6Wh] M4 Pro Macbook Pro 16 2023 @ 1178 minutes or just over 19.5 hours
- [77Wh] LG Gram Pro 16 2025 @ 1176 minutes or just over 19.5 hours
- [86Wh] Lenovo ThinkPad T16 G2 @ 1,130 minutes or just over 19 hours
- [78.6Wh] HP Elitebook 1040 G7 @ 1,128 minutes or just over 18.75 hours
- [68Wh] HP Elitebook X Flip G1i 14 @ 1,102 minutes or just over 18.25 hours
- [99.9Wh] MSI Prestige 16 B1MG @ 1,100 minutes or just over 18.25 hours
Until Microsoft and Qualcomm - Nvidia & AMD too based on murmurs - get native ARM64 software performance as consistent on Windows 11 as Apple has gotten on MacOS running on M-series APUs (fixing GPU drivers, overhauling hardware-accelerated emulation, and/or integrating x64-to-ARM64 recompiling into Windows Installer) users of non-Apple laptops and desktops will be better off not adopting ARM CPUs and APUs for general use.
*Real-world battery life is typically 25-40% shorter than the tested runtimes when factoring-in full display brightness, operation on "balanced" power mode, and 10% battery degradation within a year as Notebookcheck conducts WLAN/WiFi benchmarks on each model at 150 nits with "activated power-saving measures" while "ultralight web browsing".