ljfriedman970 I'm afraid you can't lay this at the door step of "looking way too hard at the Apple logo...". Apple was one of the first kids on the block to bring drag and drop to the masses and you can drag and drop from just about any application, to MacOS, any other application, or a combination thereof. Despite the fact that Apple has produced some cross-platform applications that have a foundation in web code (Music or AppleTV+) those are far fewer than MSFT rolls out with Windows. Apple gimped their productivity suite years ago with the webification nonsense with apps like Pages, but no one is going to Apple for a productivity suite for business, and Apple isn't charging money for it either.
Add to the fact that you can operate an iPhone, iPad, or Mac without needing an iCloud account to sign in or operate the device. This isn't true of MSFT. They require a Microsoft account to setup Windows 11. They require a Microsoft account and a subscription if you use any Office 365 software for the desktop. Increasingly those applications are being built in web code, rendered in WebView, and packaged in React Native; all floating on the desktop masquerading as desktop software.
Frankly, I'd be okay with that, if I got discount subscription pricing for discount, Fisher-Price software. I'm tempted to make the case that Fisher-Price could do better. This blame lies solely with Microsoft for wanting to make cross-platform with fewer resources, pack in the AI Copilot they spent a fortune in development costs, and more easily collect telemetry so that they can profile you and your preferences and make you a commercial product they can sell to third party interests to make more money.