Originally posted by: tweakmm
You're not going to find a nicer notebook for under $2000 than the 15" Powerbook. The notebook just oozes quality.
Say what you will about their desktops, but in regards to laptops Apple is king. OS X is rediculously nice too.
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
they do what needs to be done. not everyone is bent on get one bagillion frames in doom 3 as their goal in life.
That was just an example, there are a lot more, it's really hard to put a finger on but OS X is a much nicer computing environment and I'm not just saying that out of computing ignorance, I've been a PC user since I was 8 years old.Originally posted by: Gurck
No offense notfred, but personally that sounds like you're really grasping for stuff to justify paying twice the price. None of those things you mentioned bother me in the least. If I didn't know what I was doing, of course, it might be nice. Further, PC != windows. There are a growing number of Linux users out there, I hope to become one at some point soon myself
Originally posted by: eigen
Anthing that is said about the MAC Os can and should be said about most any linux distro.
Just wanted to put the linux fanboi two cents in.
Originally posted by: Gurck
No offense notfred, but personally that sounds like you're really grasping for stuff to justify paying twice the price. None of those things you mentioned bother me in the least. If I didn't know what I was doing, of course, it might be nice. Further, PC != windows. There are a growing number of Linux users out there, I hope to become one at some point soon myself
Originally posted by: BroeBo
Originally posted by: 0roo0roo
they do what needs to be done. not everyone is bent on get one bagillion frames in doom 3 as their goal in life.
that is an ignorant statement. not everyone plays computer games nevermind trying to get "one bagillion" frames in Doom 3. PCs also do what needs to be done. try again.
Originally posted by: eigen
Anthing that is said about the MAC Os can and should be said about most any linux distro.
Just wanted to put the linux fanboi two cents in.
Originally posted by: notfred
I'm psoting this from a PC, but Apple just plain has a better OS.
Examples:
You're writing something in word. You save it to the desktop. You say "D'oh, I didn't want to save that on the desktop, I wanted to save it in my 'Word documents' folder".
In windows you have two options. Close the file, move it to the new folder, open it again. OR use "File > Save As" and then go into explorer and delete the old one.
On the mac, you go to the finder and move the file. That's all. You can continue worknig on the word file without closing it.
You want to use handy unix stuff like perl and grep? IN windows, you can get a lot of it to work through through cygwin or some third party release for stuff. But on OS X, it all jsut works. Heck, most of it comes with the OS.
Right now I'm typing in a quick reply box in firefox in windws. Note that I just misspelled "windows" in the last sentance. If I was typing this reply in Safari for OS X, "windws" would be underlined in red, the same way misspelled words are underlines for you in Word.
If I want to make a backup of all my settings and files in OS X, I jsut copy /Users/MyUsername to another drive. I can then reinstall the OS or whatever, and copy my stuff back. Everything will be the same, down to my wallpaper, desktop icon placement, etc. That just plain doesn't work in windows.
I could go on....
Originally posted by: BroeBo
Originally posted by: notfred
I'm psoting this from a PC, but Apple just plain has a better OS.
Examples:
You're writing something in word. You save it to the desktop. You say "D'oh, I didn't want to save that on the desktop, I wanted to save it in my 'Word documents' folder".
In windows you have two options. Close the file, move it to the new folder, open it again. OR use "File > Save As" and then go into explorer and delete the old one.
On the mac, you go to the finder and move the file. That's all. You can continue worknig on the word file without closing it.
You want to use handy unix stuff like perl and grep? IN windows, you can get a lot of it to work through through cygwin or some third party release for stuff. But on OS X, it all jsut works. Heck, most of it comes with the OS.
Right now I'm typing in a quick reply box in firefox in windws. Note that I just misspelled "windows" in the last sentance. If I was typing this reply in Safari for OS X, "windws" would be underlined in red, the same way misspelled words are underlines for you in Word.
If I want to make a backup of all my settings and files in OS X, I jsut copy /Users/MyUsername to another drive. I can then reinstall the OS or whatever, and copy my stuff back. Everything will be the same, down to my wallpaper, desktop icon placement, etc. That just plain doesn't work in windows.
I could go on....
These are small things...what about programs that are of real use?
BTW: you can copy your /documents and settings/[username] in XP and then bring it down to a new computer with XP and it will be the same as it was on the old PC...i do that here at my work all the time.
Originally posted by: notfred
Originally posted by: Gurck
No offense notfred, but personally that sounds like you're really grasping for stuff to justify paying twice the price. None of those things you mentioned bother me in the least. If I didn't know what I was doing, of course, it might be nice. Further, PC != windows. There are a growing number of Linux users out there, I hope to become one at some point soon myself
Of course it doesn't bother you. If you spent your whole life driving around in Honda Civics, you'd be perfectly happy with your Honda Civic, which is a perfectly decent, affordable car. But if you bought a Mercedes-Benz and drove that around for a year, you'd realize that it's all the little things that make it the better car, and when you went back to the Civic, you'd notice things that used to seem fine now feel inferior to the Mercedes.
Originally posted by: Gurck
Since we're discussing Apples and this question was ignored in the last thread - why doesn't Apple work on a winex? There are a lot of gamers out there, and a gaming rig costs twice what an internet & word-processing rig costs, and so wouldn't they benefit greatly by working on this? I mean Transgaming does it for Linux for a $5/month fee for users, what gives?
Originally posted by: BroeBo
Originally posted by: notfred
I'm psoting this from a PC, but Apple just plain has a better OS.
Examples:
You're writing something in word. You save it to the desktop. You say "D'oh, I didn't want to save that on the desktop, I wanted to save it in my 'Word documents' folder".
In windows you have two options. Close the file, move it to the new folder, open it again. OR use "File > Save As" and then go into explorer and delete the old one.
On the mac, you go to the finder and move the file. That's all. You can continue worknig on the word file without closing it.
You want to use handy unix stuff like perl and grep? IN windows, you can get a lot of it to work through through cygwin or some third party release for stuff. But on OS X, it all jsut works. Heck, most of it comes with the OS.
Right now I'm typing in a quick reply box in firefox in windws. Note that I just misspelled "windows" in the last sentance. If I was typing this reply in Safari for OS X, "windws" would be underlined in red, the same way misspelled words are underlines for you in Word.
If I want to make a backup of all my settings and files in OS X, I jsut copy /Users/MyUsername to another drive. I can then reinstall the OS or whatever, and copy my stuff back. Everything will be the same, down to my wallpaper, desktop icon placement, etc. That just plain doesn't work in windows.
I could go on....
These are small things...what about programs that are of real use?
BTW: you can copy your /documents and settings/[username] in XP and then bring it down to a new computer with XP and it will be the same as it was on the old PC...i do that here at my work all the time.

 
				
		