I'm not sure which segment in particular you have in mind, but whichever one, I'm pretty sure the answer is "no".
The big problem with that is that they are utterly enormous; all of their "traditional" niches combined are dwarfed by their casual user base. Creative professionals are just not a big market, comparatively; neither are folks who just want a great unix laptop. (And command line nerds in particular are becoming less and less welcome; this is why I'm probably typing on my last Mac.)
But the second problem is that, even if somehow Ives leaving meant that the scales fell from every Apple employee's eyes and suddenly they all wanted to put back the scripting languages, make machines specifically dedicated to running Pro Tools or After Effects and bundle every mac with a copy of 3 in Three, they still have a multiyear product pipeline. You don't turn that ship quickly.
Meanwhile Microsoft is bending over backwards to cater to the command line geeks. Would not have predicted this a few years ago. Apparently they’ve remembered the old ”Developers developers developers” mantra again.
They have to, because their dev things were simply not cutting it. They were wholly inadequate for this new era of ... web. Then now 10+ years later they realized the cloud is a thing. And Azure does quite well, so why not make everything more like Azure? They were so far from the peloton, they bought GitHub and "integrated Linux" to try to keep folks using Windows.
The big problem with that is that they are utterly enormous; all of their "traditional" niches combined are dwarfed by their casual user base. Creative professionals are just not a big market, comparatively; neither are folks who just want a great unix laptop. (And command line nerds in particular are becoming less and less welcome; this is why I'm probably typing on my last Mac.)
But the second problem is that, even if somehow Ives leaving meant that the scales fell from every Apple employee's eyes and suddenly they all wanted to put back the scripting languages, make machines specifically dedicated to running Pro Tools or After Effects and bundle every mac with a copy of 3 in Three, they still have a multiyear product pipeline. You don't turn that ship quickly.