1) Mid-2010 MacBook Pro, with RAM and SSD upgrades. This is my main machine at home. It has never had to be wiped and reinstalled, and it gets rebooted about once a month.
2) Late-2013 MacBook Pro. This is my work machine and the story is similar to my home machine. It's never needed a reinstall and gets rebooted about once a month as well.
3) Lenovo ThinkPad x131e (Intel). This is my travel computer, serving a similar purpose as the Chromebook mentioned in this article (minus presenting stuff). I'm running OpenSUSE Tumbleweed on this - frequent updates lead to frequent reboots. There's also all the associated weirdness that comes with running a rolling release Linux on a machine that requires proprietary WiFi drivers (they tend to lag by a couple of days). When I ran OpenSUSE Leap it was almost as solid as the Macs.
I'd call the Macs "pure solid" machines, or as close as I can reasonably get. The ThinkPad is decent and the weirdness with it is really my fault.
I've got three machines that I use regularly.
1) Mid-2010 MacBook Pro, with RAM and SSD upgrades. This is my main machine at home. It has never had to be wiped and reinstalled, and it gets rebooted about once a month.
2) Late-2013 MacBook Pro. This is my work machine and the story is similar to my home machine. It's never needed a reinstall and gets rebooted about once a month as well.
3) Lenovo ThinkPad x131e (Intel). This is my travel computer, serving a similar purpose as the Chromebook mentioned in this article (minus presenting stuff). I'm running OpenSUSE Tumbleweed on this - frequent updates lead to frequent reboots. There's also all the associated weirdness that comes with running a rolling release Linux on a machine that requires proprietary WiFi drivers (they tend to lag by a couple of days). When I ran OpenSUSE Leap it was almost as solid as the Macs.
I'd call the Macs "pure solid" machines, or as close as I can reasonably get. The ThinkPad is decent and the weirdness with it is really my fault.
Like everything else, your experience may vary.