Thanks all (or most) for the rational responses!
A few responses are so ridiculously and irrationally, self-righteous and prejudiced that they are not worth the keystrokes to comment. I am honestly astonished at how closed minded some supposedly intelligent people are!![]()
What's a rational response? Anyone that has a mac?![]()
...goodness me, touched a nerve did I? Come on - you and I and the majority of people who have ever been involved in such a discussion know that anyone whoYou exhibit some of the problems I have with the Apple faithful, not Apple itself. Some of you resemble door to door Jehovah's Witnesses that try to preach the Truth about computing salvation, and anyone that thinks otherwise is a closed minded simpleton and you talk to them in a very condescending manner.
Look, the Apple platform is good. I recommend Macs to people who would benefit from them all the time, simply because they're great for the average user. But it's really not for everybody.
...goodness me, touched a nerve did I? Come on - you and I and the majority of people who have ever been involved in such a discussion know that anyone whoadmits to owning a PC and enjoying the experience is going to be harangued by those among the Mac and Apple faithful who are either uninformed or ignorant or both.
I accept that but don't have to believe that grown up minds think that way.
I use a Mac because that is what my industry evolved using. It is still what the Printing & Graphic Arts have as a preferred platform globally and therefore what I teach.
I ensure that I teach cross platform solutions in terms of operation and shortcuts.
Do you have a problem with the fact that I enjoy the experience?
Fixed to align with my experienceTry going through college with liberal arts friends and not be constantly under attack from the Mac snobs.
It might just be my demographic. In my "group" it's cooler to own a Mac and when you do, you're all of a sudden far more cultured and creative and hip. I hear the same talking points, like "BSOD," "OMG I DOWNLOADED ALL THIS PORN AND GOT SO MANY VIRUSES, FUCK MICROSOFT," "I CAN'T DEAL WITH RIGHT CLICKING" and it makes my ears bleed. Since you seem to be more along the productivity profession, your experience is the opposite, I assume?
The thing is, I've never known a group so eager to try to convert the unbelievers, and some of the language you use is reminiscent of that attitude, though I don't believe it's your intention. I might just be reading into it though.
None at all.
They're not just influenced by software availability, they are also influenced by economics. PCs are much more affordable. Macs are a luxury.If there is a game or a program that is offered for PC and not Mac that's another issue....but it comes from the fact most people are "forced" by the market to get PCs from the get go, so they have no means to objectively decide sometimes.
They're not just influenced by software availability, they are also influenced by economics. PCs are much more affordable. Macs are a luxury.
I think some Mac evangelists are blind to this reality. I find Mac evangelists to be really annoying, even more annoying than Linux evangelists (at least Linux is free).
Fixed to align with my experienceTry going through college with liberal arts friends and not be constantly under attack from the Mac snobs.
I guarantee you any pc user you meet who antagonizes you about a mac has had this kind of experience. I couldn't care in the least about mac and pc until I was in the environment mentioned above and got actively harassed and insulted for not having a mac. The entire culture surrounding the mac is one of elitism and snobbery especially towards the poor unwashed masses who are stuck with windows machines.
The problem is, most people don't think this way. If they did, Wal-mart wouldn't have nearly the market share it has today.The price thing is less clear cut than some make it to be. I have a Macbook Pro for almost 5 years now and it still runs as fast if not faster (taking advantage of the new OSs) then ever before. Now you could say...big deal...but from years of experience with PCs I got say it's refreshing. It's still a competent 3d modeling tool too.
If I'm going to buy something for the long run, I personally don't mind paying more. It has to do with expectations too. Besides, in these 5 years I've had lots of friends using the price argument...but bought 2 or more laptops while I sticked with the same one.
Whatever floats one's boat. PC traditionalists can be annoying in their own way too. Don't let evangelists get all the credit.
This kind of discussion and debate has so many different perspectives. As someone who uses a PC, I find these debates to be pointless in the manner that you see them acted. I have been a PC user I was in the 1st grade. I'm 23 now. I was exposed to 20-70 mhz computers by my father that is a Lotus Notes programmer. He continued to supply me with my own PC Laptop from his company.
As I got into middle school, and from then on, I learned how to build my own PC's. Apples were popping up, but I didn't pay attention. I was used to the structure of a PC, and the change in performance was either a downgrade or side-grade. As time went by, I I felt too comfortable with PC's, and found no reason to dislike them to the point of stopping usage.
There are so many different factors to take into consideration for the Apple vs. PC debate: Price vs. User vs. System Capabilities.
When you compare prices, are you comparing systems with similar specifications and purposes? Are you looking at their performance, in real life and system benchmarks? What about the user?
Is it user friendly? What is the system's intended purposes? What is the user actually doing on the computer? Comparing two people's usage on a computer, even two friends is like apples and oranges.
What is the system's stability? What are the system specifications?
I can bog you down with questions for an hour. Like I said, I've stuck with PC's for over 15 years and I've been building PC's for the last 10. I've tried using MacOS' interface and it felt too focused on visuals rather than an organized and efficient layout. It may be different for others.
I'm using an Asus G71VX-X3A Laptop with Windows 7 Home Prem. It was $1200. I bought this laptop on a whim to replace another laptop. I quickly found out a few weeks later after benchmarks and testing games that it's basically capable of any latest games. I couldn't find an equal Apple laptop that wasn't shooting me up near $2000. I could go on Newegg and build a PC desktop with better components for half the price.
Just from not talking to many Apple users, I can agree with Jock that they give the "Apple is hip and cool and stuff!" attitude vibe. I'm not saying they're wrong, but I'm a technical geek that isn't impressed by the image my computer or media player gives. To me, it's all about the absolute facts. There's a clear better choice when it comes to technical specifications. I'm just not sure what. You have to think about the user's needs and desires. I know if I found an iMac that was 10% faster than my laptop, I'm not sure if learning a whole new interface, file system and operating system would be worth it.