It's not a romantic view for me, but out of practicality's sake.
I wouldn't want a plastic throwaway machine, so would have to be something
I could afford, likely old and broken, fine by me if I happen to come across one too cheap to refuse, much like the 500squid bandsaw or tablesaw.(which I needed)
Not as common on the ground either, so to get one even at that price ain't common)
Takes a lot of juice to run a P/T if you consider everything, so another reason
as well as space and noise.
I consider the other machines a lot more necessary as in, try doing some of the other stuff by hand like cutting veneers and so on.
A lot more time consuming than a few swipes of a plane IMO.
That's why I regard my flat workbench (without chisel or saw cuts anywhere) polishedy, fairly rigid, stable, adjustable, long enough to do the work, and very well lit with an angle poise lamp, as so important.
A cleat on the end is all that's needed for me for dimensioning,
no trapping the work in vices, dogs, wedges, winding sticks, that all looks like faff to me.
I see
@profchris has replied regarding thinner stock, which i would clamp down
Thankfully using the cap iron correctly honed @50 degrees, regarding either planing into a stop, or veneer like thickness doesn't require one to flip the work or do anything difficult or fafflike, like having to scrape where the clamp was, or require moving it constantly, as that would be annoying otherwise.
Most folk think otherwise than this!
Even with this thin lab counter top, which flexes on the ends, it still looks a lot quicker and easier to use it as such, anything else I've ever seen looks like harder work for a lesser result to me.