
I've done the world of PCs and now I'm doing the Mac thang! I guess that puts me on the fence with the crows!

Keith
![]() ![]() ![]() |
Moderators: admin, mdc, TAXIstaff
Apple took an entirely different approach to the Mac, which was to essentially build a closed system. Apple controls the hardware specs and makes the machines and as such, can construct an operating system that is designed to work with that specific hardware. In my experience, this made for a much more "solid" platform as opposed to the much more "open" spec of the PC platform which encouraged entire industries of board and chip makers, but was rife with incompatibilities, etc. But, of course, this also meant that the PCs were cheaper and more easily serviced, upgraded, etc. There are tradeoffs in both directions, IMO. The price of Macs has always been higher, but the tradeoff, at least in my experience, was that it worked almost flawlessly from day one. These days, the OS has gotten as bloated and top heavy as Windows so there seem to be more issues at times, but overall, I tend to have less problems with Macs, and I use a Windows machine at my day gig all the time. It's an HP laptop and I've never used a bigger piece of s**t for a computer than this thing. When I close the lid, it refuses to wake up when I re-open it, I have to do a hard boot, when I connect it to a projector, the image on the laptop screen becomes the size of a postage stamp, the wireless networking setup is enough to make me want to throw it on the ground and stomp on it. On the other hand, my personal Macbook pro has none of those issues. That's just my experience. I'm not opposed to Windows, I just prefer Macs because I like to be productive and just waiting the 7 minutes for a Windows XP machine to fully boot up seems like something that shouldn't be taking place in 2010 (I'm referring to my crappy HP laptop at work).Cruciform wrote:I've never had a mac so I can't comment. But I love PCs because I'm a fiddler...I love buying new parts and building new PCs from components. Can you do that with a mac? (genuine question)
I agree with Mazz on most of this except the OS thing. I haven't seen or used Windows 7... I can however task manager down all processes on my Vista machine, down to the basic OS and I find that my Snow Leopard 10.6.3 machine is occupying about 1/3 of the system resources that Vista does. I lose somethings like, right clicking stuff, but hardware being almost the same these days, the "lite-ness" of Snow Leopard is obviously one of the Macs greatest performance gains! UNIX has always been a more efficient and more powerful language than DOS. To tell you the truth, I was skeptical that Apple could command the swap file better than Microsoft with all their years of experience but Apple sure seems to have it goin' on!mazz wrote: These days, the OS has gotten as bloated and top heavy as Windows so there seem to be more issues at times
This is sort of a modern day myth. My MacBook came from Shanghai where it was built. I'll betcha, your HPs, Dells, Acers and a host of other common machines come from the same factory and I know they all have the same CPU chipsets. There's not really much difference between machines anymore than the case, my MacBook is Aluminum, my Alienware is Magnesium, and the OS.jonathanm wrote:That's not really the target market for the Mac. Apple has always just made really cool stuff that works easily. In order to do that, they have to control as many variables as they can, including who built the hardward and what's in it.Cruciform wrote:I've never had a mac so I can't comment. But I love PCs because I'm a fiddler...I love buying new parts and building new PCs from components. Can you do that with a mac? (genuine question)
Right Mazz, and thanks for the help! What I mean is, and I do have a two button mouse, if you go to like Finder, you can't hold Ctrl and and select a lot of different things like you can in Explorer. In Explorer, you select things in whatever order you want, then right click for task oriented handling, easy. Macs you can only select a range. The right click in Finder is almost meaningless for me and I have to go to the menu bar for a lot of task handling. Small hair splitting stuff I'll admit but it was a disruption of my work flow in learning all about Snow Leopard. Like no backspace key... Double clicking... That sort of thing. Its just different. I'll gladly put up with it when compared to the performance gains especially since I've gotten used to that stuff! Its obvious to me that Apple has never really bloated the OS with all those easy user functions and has opted for a leaner and liter OS. Also, by way of comparison, if you take a brand new Mac and Vista machine, side by side, you'll find the Mac OS occupys somewhere about 10% of the space on the drive that Vista resides in.mazz wrote:If you get a two button mouse or trackball, you can right-click in Mac OS, no problem.
That's one of the things I've always wondered about having never spent much time with a PC. I know that's the hype, that 'they just work' but I've always found that to be an exaggeration, I've run into plenty of bugs and incompatibilities and when I ever I speak with someone who's thinking of switching to Mac I'm quick to point out that they're not frustration free.mazz wrote:In my experience, this made for a much more "solid" platform as opposed to the much more "open" spec of the PC platform which encouraged entire industries of board and chip makers, but was rife with incompatibilities, etc. But, of course, this also meant that the PCs were cheaper and more easily serviced, upgraded, etc. There are tradeoffs in both directions, IMO. The price of Macs has always been higher, but the tradeoff, at least in my experience, was that it worked almost flawlessly from day one. These days, the OS has gotten as bloated and top heavy as Windows so there seem to be more issues at times, but overall, I tend to have less problems with Macs, and I use a Windows machine at my day gig all the time. It's an HP laptop and I've never used a bigger piece of s**t for a computer than this thing. When I close the lid, it refuses to wake up when I re-open it, I have to do a hard boot, when I connect it to a projector, the image on the laptop screen becomes the size of a postage stamp, the wireless networking setup is enough to make me want to throw it on the ground and stomp on it. On the other hand, my personal Macbook pro has none of those issues. That's just my experience. I'm not opposed to Windows, I just prefer Macs because I like to be productive and just waiting the 7 minutes for a Windows XP machine to fully boot up seems like something that shouldn't be taking place in 2010 (I'm referring to my crappy HP laptop at work).Cruciform wrote:I've never had a mac so I can't comment. But I love PCs because I'm a fiddler...I love buying new parts and building new PCs from components. Can you do that with a mac? (genuine question)
Mazz
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 14 guests