They absolutely do. Remember that making a product as efficiently and inexpensively as possible often means heavily commodifying its components and making its parts replaceable or interchangeable. Intentionally making a product harder to repair (to force sales of replacements, i.e. "planned obsolescence", or to drive sales of service plans and replacement parts, like John Deere does) takes more engineering and makes the product more expensive, which makes the first team of engineers (you know -- the guys who made the fucking thing work well and cheap in the first place) cry.
This is 100% Apple's fault. The last time they made decent computer hardware they looked like pizza boxes. Now their computers look like toasters or cheese graters and their brand identity went from "think different" to "shiny shrink-wrapped plastic shit wot does what we tell you you're allowed to do with it." Certainly they're not the first company in the world to intentionally design products and equipment that cannot be easily serviced or repaired by their customers (Boeing, John Deere, Monsanto, Dow Chemical and 3M are notoriously hostile to their own customers), but they're arguably the first major consumer brand targeting plain ol' John Q. Public with such open hostility.
Apple's biggest coup was never the iPhone itself. It was convincing the public at large that it was reasonable to charge $1,000 for a piece of transparent plastic that cost $5 to make (a monitor stand for one of their most expensive monitors), that cult-like devotion to a technology brand name was healthy or reasonable no matter how shitty the company treats its dupes (kids as young as grade school deliberately segregate themselves into social peer groups identified by which brand of fucking cell phone they carry -- iPhone or Android), that $1k+ devices were "disposable" and should be replaced at the first sign of trouble (rather than being shoved back up the vendor's ass for warranty repair) and that making fun of people who believe those things like the faggots they are makes you the bad guy.
The entire company is a shrine to consumerism and waste. The biggest tragedy is they've tied up competent engineers who create genuinely fantastic technology (it burns me up to this day that the fastest computer systems you can buy based on ARM architecture comes from Apple -- even Ampere and Graviton can't keep pace with "Apple Silicon" with billions of dollars behind both) ... and they piss away that technological advantage with consumer-unfriendly practices, anti-competitive practices, and open hostility to innovation. They "pioneered" the consumer attitude that your phone, laptop and even desktop computer, despite costing thousands, should just be a pre-built, pre-packaged hardwired thing with no expandability, and that when you outgrow it, you should replace it with a newer, better one (no trade-ins, poorfag).
In a just world where "the betterment of mankind and the advancement of computer science" mattered more, Apple would deserve nothing less than the corporate death penalty, with all of its "intellectual property" (including hardware designs/specs, documentation, source code, etc.) immediately made public domain/patent-free, all of its DRM keys and unlock tools released publicly and its executives and lawyers drawn and quartered in the public square following an entertaining show trial aired on PBS and Youtube without commercial interruption (by force/at gunpoint in the latter's case).