I'm late to this thread (well, I've been away from the IBA forum for quite some time).
I have spent the past 30 years using PCs, however apart from the 3 windows PCs at home (main desktop and a couple of laptops), I have a large amount of Macs (mac mini desktop, MacBook air, 2xmacbook pros, iPad pro, iPhones) - so I can probably give a balanced view.
The issue with the Apple products is that they are addictive, and like any addictive thing, once you are in it's hard to get out. The whole Apple ecosystem is designed to keep you locked in. The reason I have so many apple products is that they just work (99.99% of the time) and that what I do on one device is there on the others: photos, emails, audiobooks, videos, text messages, passwords, hell I can even take phone calls on my computers. Basecamp works fine on the device as does pretty much any website. I always stayed clear of apple products, including the phones, but i had to move to an iPhone for some government work, and now that I am in the ecosystem, I'm addicted and cannot get out easy.
The windows devices *can* do all that the Apple ecosystem does (dropbox to share files and photos, for example) but it requires to be setup correctly. It really depends on what you want to do with your IT: you mention editing videos - very simple on a mac and I do lots of video editing and podcast/audio development work, not so simple on the PC - but can be done.
The final thing on apple products is that they tend to keep their residual values - I just sold a 512MB iPhone XS Max (3 generations older than current) for £500, but then again it costs £1300 to buy in the first place.
You pays your money, you takes your chances.