More seriously, his post states the cost and some specifications of a macbook, and a low-cost windows laptop and that people might consider price and "mac aura" before buying. He doesn't make any useful, interesting or funny observations, conclusions, assertions or explanations. That's his entire post.
Not, "here's why I think the mac is more expensive" or "what will happen to the mac as cheap windows laptops get more powerful" or "if the mac aura is the main reason for the cost then it means XYZ", or "in previous economic downturns, mac prices changed like XYZ" or "Based on this, I predict the next device from apple will be an XYZ" or "I've built a mac price predictor" or anything. Not even as simple as "The mac is $750 more and I think that's too much".
"makes you wonder." - makes him wonder what?
"at first glance it seems like a great deal" - what about at second and further glances?
"I know it's apples and oranges, they're different" - how about discussing the differences in detail?
"saving $750 at a time of economic uncertainly could resonate with many consumers." - discuss. Explain. Reveal insight. Predict.
No, none of that. Just "two products exist with different specifications and prices".
It's a simplistic one sentence summary for a simplistic too-many-sentence blog post.
Where's the hacking? the news? the opinion? Where's the content?
You love your macbook? fine, make it a four word blog post. That would be better. A passionate outburst for a product so unusually, distinctively good that you can't resist being happy that it simply exists!
These simplistic one sentence summaries can be applied to almost any piece.
Summary of the Constitution: "We are entitled to various rights, and there are a bunch of laws that help us protect them."