Mac laptops tend to be around 16:10 aspect ratio, so yes, they are (depending on how you look at it) less wide or more tall.
I'm designing a web page layout, and at 16:9, it seems real limited on top-to-bottom real esate.
By @bobtem
Again, that depends on how you want to look at it. For example, on desktop screens, Apple prefers 5K 16:10 instead of 4K 16:9, and an advantage of that for video editors is that you can fit a whole 4K video on the screen at actual size and you have extra room at the bottom for video editing controls.
On a 16:10 display, you can design an entire 16:9 web page with a little extra room at the top or bottom for editing controls.
In reality, for web design, the actual aspect ratio of any screen depends on what’s left over after displaying the default toolbars, sidebars, bottom bars etc. in the major web browsers, and usually, that leftover space is not 16:9. And it’s even less likely to be 16:9 if the user has resized the web browser window to also see other things on the screen. So there are a lot of reasons to question whether 16:9 is even that important of a target.
Also, if we account for the fact that mobile is now the most common form of web browsing, people are often likely to experience a web page within a display aspect ratio closer to 9:16 (a phone held vertically). So web page design today is more about designing not for one aspect ratio, but to be adaptable across the typical range of aspect ratios including a desktop browser window (maximized and not) and mobile devices (probably vertical, with a low UI resolution, and less room for content). Seen this way, the fact that a Mac laptop display is 16:10 should not be a big deal.