shortylickens
No Lifer
- Jul 15, 2003
- 80,287
- 17,081
- 136
I'll start by saying I purchased an iBook G4. It had Dual boot. OSX and OS9.
After one day I disliked it. Yes its pretty. But I have been told that many of the pretty things rely on OpenGL. If you have a weak video card you'll get sluggish response in day to day use.
Dont know if its true or not but I sure felt it. It always seemed like I was fighting just to get basic tasks done. Options and menus arent as full featured OR intuitive.
It takes many more mouse clicks to get basic and advanced tasks finished. I did a side by side comparison with WinXP (on my computer desk). Using my 5-button MS mouse didnt help very much. (Wasnt supported well either.)
Advanced options seem to be more hidden and difficult to change.
WinXP finds 90% of my USB goodies first try, and installs drivers for them right away.
OSX wouldnt even acknowledge my HP LJ1000 as device, much less actually print something.
Didnt find the Logitech USB mouse at all, but works great with the MS intellimouse explorer (??????)
Then I rebooted into OS9. OH MAI GAAWD!!! Wish I could say I was able to exit fast. No such luck.
This thing did crash on me too. Quite a few times. At least windows will run sluggishly for a minute while I open task-manager and kill the bloated or buggy application. The Mac just froze and died.
(Note to Mac lovers and less experienced Windows lovers: You can kill explorer.exe and then run it again from task-manager. Solves most of the really horrible glitches you may come across. Faster than rebooting.)
If I need a reliable server to take care of many users needs with the rock-solid reliablity of UNIX I'll use............. UNIX!
If I want to run a wide variety of hardware, software, and OS's I'll stick to Windows. I'll even play around with Linux now and again. It can run off a CD/DVD or even a hard drive in my windows system. One distro even found my Cable modem and IP assignment, no questions asked. That didnt happen on my Mac.
On the plus side: the contstruction and display were top notch, with a return department that was on the ball. Such is the burden of the underdog (GO AMD!!).
At the very least I hope I've made some insightful observations concerning the topic, and both sides can appreciate what I've dealt with.
After one day I disliked it. Yes its pretty. But I have been told that many of the pretty things rely on OpenGL. If you have a weak video card you'll get sluggish response in day to day use.
Dont know if its true or not but I sure felt it. It always seemed like I was fighting just to get basic tasks done. Options and menus arent as full featured OR intuitive.
It takes many more mouse clicks to get basic and advanced tasks finished. I did a side by side comparison with WinXP (on my computer desk). Using my 5-button MS mouse didnt help very much. (Wasnt supported well either.)
Advanced options seem to be more hidden and difficult to change.
WinXP finds 90% of my USB goodies first try, and installs drivers for them right away.
OSX wouldnt even acknowledge my HP LJ1000 as device, much less actually print something.
Didnt find the Logitech USB mouse at all, but works great with the MS intellimouse explorer (??????)
Then I rebooted into OS9. OH MAI GAAWD!!! Wish I could say I was able to exit fast. No such luck.
This thing did crash on me too. Quite a few times. At least windows will run sluggishly for a minute while I open task-manager and kill the bloated or buggy application. The Mac just froze and died.
(Note to Mac lovers and less experienced Windows lovers: You can kill explorer.exe and then run it again from task-manager. Solves most of the really horrible glitches you may come across. Faster than rebooting.)
If I need a reliable server to take care of many users needs with the rock-solid reliablity of UNIX I'll use............. UNIX!
If I want to run a wide variety of hardware, software, and OS's I'll stick to Windows. I'll even play around with Linux now and again. It can run off a CD/DVD or even a hard drive in my windows system. One distro even found my Cable modem and IP assignment, no questions asked. That didnt happen on my Mac.
On the plus side: the contstruction and display were top notch, with a return department that was on the ball. Such is the burden of the underdog (GO AMD!!).
At the very least I hope I've made some insightful observations concerning the topic, and both sides can appreciate what I've dealt with.
