Originally posted by: sxr7171
Originally posted by: Thin Lizzy
Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
Originally posted by: sxr7171
However, I just couldn't make the jump this time, and I'm glad I didn't as my school does everything on Windows software.
Any school that limits itself to one platform isn't worth going to.![]()
My sister goes to the Health Science Center, to become a Dentist. She had a choice between choosing a Windows platform notebook, or an Apple. She chose the 12'' iBook. She loves it.
I also go to Dental school incidentally, and we don't really get that choice. If I really wanted to I could have gone Apple and supported myself and bought extra software on my dime to run with Apple but I don't see the hassle and cost as worth it. I actually chose my laptop before I knew which school I was going to and I chose the IBM anyway because it was going to be my work laptop (as opposed to my hobby desktop). I needed it to run the programs I need for school and to get the functionality I need to interface with my phone and PDA among other things that are more cheaply and efficiently accomplished on a PC.
I would take a Mac mini for a second hobby desktop though just to mess with.
Usually professional schools don't have the sort of IT infrastructure to support both Macs and PCs anymore. It costs a lot to run a Dental school and supporting Macs probably would have cost us extra on our software licenses, not to mention have staff to support Macs on site all for the 5% who would have preferred them.
Wouldn't the Mac G5s destroy the PCs?
Originally posted by: Thin Lizzy
Originally posted by: sxr7171
Originally posted by: Thin Lizzy
Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
Originally posted by: sxr7171
However, I just couldn't make the jump this time, and I'm glad I didn't as my school does everything on Windows software.
Any school that limits itself to one platform isn't worth going to.![]()
My sister goes to the Health Science Center, to become a Dentist. She had a choice between choosing a Windows platform notebook, or an Apple. She chose the 12'' iBook. She loves it.
I also go to Dental school incidentally, and we don't really get that choice. If I really wanted to I could have gone Apple and supported myself and bought extra software on my dime to run with Apple but I don't see the hassle and cost as worth it. I actually chose my laptop before I knew which school I was going to and I chose the IBM anyway because it was going to be my work laptop (as opposed to my hobby desktop). I needed it to run the programs I need for school and to get the functionality I need to interface with my phone and PDA among other things that are more cheaply and efficiently accomplished on a PC.
I would take a Mac mini for a second hobby desktop though just to mess with.
Usually professional schools don't have the sort of IT infrastructure to support both Macs and PCs anymore. It costs a lot to run a Dental school and supporting Macs probably would have cost us extra on our software licenses, not to mention have staff to support Macs on site all for the 5% who would have preferred them.
Cool!The iBook is my sister's first Mac. She had a Fujitsu 1.6GHz Pentium 4 laptop, but she wanted something smaller. The iBook, for the price and size, was the cheapest we found. I know she would have gotten another PC notebook if we found a good cheap one. She loves the iBook though. I am kind of glad we got it for her, because when she had the Fujitsu, she never ran any spyware/adware removal programs, and she never touched Norton, so her Fujitsu ran like sh!t most of the time. I think the iBook was good because she doesn't have to worry about that stuff.
My sister gets a lot of programs on CD from her Dental school, and all the programs support either Mac or Windows. Her Dental school has wireless networks. And the iBook has built in wireless. She is telling that she is the only one in her classes with an Apple notebook. The others have Dells or something else.![]()
Originally posted by: The Boston Dangler
Hmmmmm.......
My PC runs too many different programs. You say that won't be a problem?
About $500 for a 3 year old vid card, $400 for DDR333, and $400 for a "superdrive" (a.k.a. pioneer a-04)?
Throw in a 1 button mouse, no upgradability, and a pair of Birkenstocks, and you've got a deal!
Originally posted by: calvinHobbs
Originally posted by: Umberger
My brother just got a new 20" iMac G5. want to know what he does with it?
1)AIM
2)E-mail
3)MS Word.
To its credit, the thing has never frozen or crashed, the case is awesome looking, and the visual effects are stunning. Also, it comes with a really neat game, where you roll a marble around a map and collect gems. Is this worth almost $3000? I think not. But for $3000 I would think that they could give me a fvcking 2 button mouse.
I think a lot of what people are paying for is the ease of use of OSX. That operating system babies you, and won't let you screw anything up. It drives me nuts, but little bro seems to like the fact that he can't break stuff by messing with settings.
:thumbsup:
Originally posted by: Umberger
My brother just got a new 20" iMac G5. want to know what he does with it?
1)AIM
2)E-mail
3)MS Word.
To its credit, the thing has never frozen or crashed, the case is awesome looking, and the visual effects are stunning. Also, it comes with a really neat game, where you roll a marble around a map and collect gems. Is this worth almost $3000? I think not. But for $3000 I would think that they could give me a fvcking 2 button mouse.
I think a lot of what people are paying for is the ease of use of OSX. That operating system babies you, and won't let you screw anything up. It drives me nuts, but little bro seems to like the fact that he can't break stuff by messing with settings.
Originally posted by: XBoxLPU
Originally posted by: Umberger
My brother just got a new 20" iMac G5. want to know what he does with it?
1)AIM
2)E-mail
3)MS Word.
To its credit, the thing has never frozen or crashed, the case is awesome looking, and the visual effects are stunning. Also, it comes with a really neat game, where you roll a marble around a map and collect gems. Is this worth almost $3000? I think not. But for $3000 I would think that they could give me a fvcking 2 button mouse.
I think a lot of what people are paying for is the ease of use of OSX. That operating system babies you, and won't let you screw anything up. It drives me nuts, but little bro seems to like the fact that he can't break stuff by messing with settings.
Wouldn't a Mac Mini been just as good and $2500 cheaper
![]()
Originally posted by: Monkey muppet
I have a three way Firewire800 Network at home including a Socket A & an A64. The thing is even a RAID 5 SCSI array can't suturate Firewire bandwidth so there's no point in having it
Originally posted by: sxr7171
You're right actually about Windows. Freaking SP2 is so bad that I can't believe it gets so much support on a "geek site" like this. You'd think that we'd know better. However I can see how the resident sysadmins love it.
Originally posted by: The Boston Dangler
The Apple website refers to PC's as "Frankensteins"
These people would much rather be seen in a New Beetle over a Shelby Cobra or Ferrari Enzo.
There is a biological term for these people: "vagina"
Originally posted by: CSammy
Mac users sure are a defensive bunch, especially at a rabid fansite like MacDailyNews.com Seems like the "news" are anything anti-Microsoft, anti-PC they can find.
I'm amazed at how delusional some of them can be. Take a look at this story for example, and scroll down to read the comments.
http://macdailynews.com/index.php/weblog/comments/5659/
You'll notice the rabid fans don't seem to know much even about their own "64-bit" operating system and hardware, yet Apple bias is in full throttle.
Originally posted by: The Boston Dangler
Hmmmmm.......
My PC runs too many different programs. You say that won't be a problem?
About $500 for a 3 year old vid card, $400 for DDR333, and $400 for a "superdrive" (a.k.a. pioneer a-04)?
Throw in a 1 button mouse, no upgradability, and a pair of Birkenstocks, and you've got a deal!
Originally posted by: CSammy
Where to begin, perhaps the commentor that thought it was "proposterous" that Tiger isn't a full 64-bit operating system? Or the commentor that thought it would take half a refrigerator to cool a dual Opteron, based on PENTIUM specs? Plenty more too, good read for a laugh.
