- Feb 29, 2004
- 1,945
- 8
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I can't stand all the people on this site and others who seem to think that Mac users are either A) dumb B) too rich C) technically incompetent D) slaves to fashion E) Microsoft haters.
I have a Mac Pro (first gen, purchased used on eBay for ~$1100 after Bing Cashback, upgraded from 2.0GHz to 2.66GHz Xeons using Anand's guide -- and actually made a profit selling the 2.0GHz Xeons for more than I paid for the 2.66GHz ones -- upgraded to a Radeon HD3870 with an Arctic Cooling fanless heatsink) and a MacBook (first gen Core Duo, purchased at great discount when the Core 2 Duos came out, maxed with 2GB RAM and a 500GB HDD). I bought my first PC (a Compaq laptop, Presario 1672, with a 350Mhz AMD K6-2, that I later upgraded to a 450Mhz K6-2+) in 1999 when I entered college and built my first desktop PC in 2001 (PC Chips dual CPU motherboard, started with a Celeron 850Mhz overclocked to 133FSB (1.13GHz) and then later with dual PIII 900's). Before that I used my family's K6 300MHz and before that, a 16MHz 386SX. Since then, I have built probably 20 or more PC's for friends, family, and my jobs. From small form factor ASUS desktop machines to 4U rackmount dual Opteron monsters, I have done it all, from scratch, with my own two hands. A couple of years ago I single-handedly installed a rack of 20-some-odd new Dell PowerEdge 1650's and 2650's in a colo facility. I have installed Windows 98, 98SE, Me, 2000, XP, and Vista from scratch. Oh and before that, DOS 6.22, Windows 3.1 and OS/2 Warp v3. I was editing my CONFIG.SYS and AUTOEXEC.BAT when I was 12 years old. Don't tell me that I don't know Microsoft. On the Open Source side, I have installed and used Mandrake Linux 7 through 10, Red Hat 8, and FreeBSD 4.x, 5.x, and 6.x. And on the Mac side (starting with thrown-away Macs I picked up in the halls at college) OS 7, 8.6, 9.1, 10.1, 10.2, 10.3, 10.4, 10.5, and 10.6.
I have old machines sitting out in my garage that I have picked up cheap on Craigslist just because i wanted a SPARC or an Alpha to play with. In college I had a stack of obsolete Macs stacked in the corner of the kitchen. Right now sitting at my desk I can see 5 computers: 1) Mac Pro 2) MacBook 3) PC in sig 4) HP laptop I'm fixing for my sister 5) SFF Linux machine from my old job that I'm keeping for backup purposes. I've got a stack of about 15 hard drives sitting on various shelves, and had more before I sold some in the FS/FT forums last year. I've got 3 shelves full of O'Reilly and other programming/sysadmin books. I've been reading AnandTech since roughly 2001 and bought some of my first PC components (Nvidia GeForce2 GTS-V from Newegg and my blue Antec "Dragon" SX1080 case, still in use to this day, containing the PC in my sig -- purchased from SVC) from deals on the Hot Deals forum, back when SlickDeals and FatWallet were still upstarts.
In other words... I am not a computing moron. No, I'm not a sysadmin for my day job (although at one point that was included in my job description as one of many hats that I wore) and I've never hacked on the Linux kernel, but I've got a LOT of experience in computing in general.
It's just that I happen to like Macs! I've got UNIX, I've got the nicest-looking GUI I've ever seen, I've got speed, I've got smoothness, all the fonts are brilliantly anti-aliased and the drop shadows on all the windows just make everything so nice to look at. Would I be horribly put out if Mac OS X dropped off the face of the earth tomorrow and I were forced to install Windows or Linux as my main desktop system? No, of course not. I think that innovation has mostly disappeared from the desktop OS scene since... oh, I don't know, 1998 or so? I pretty much see the last decade as refinement, refinement, refinement. First we had to get to where we weren't crashing all the time. Now that's pretty much taken care of, so it's a matter of making everything easier easier easier to use, and prettier prettier prettier to look at. And that's where Mac OS X excels. Really, it just works, and in a way that I generally like. No, I'm not a big fan of the Dock, and I think MS was retarded to copy it in Windows 7, but Exposé and Spotlight work better than anything I've seen anywhere else. I have NEVER had a problem with an OS update from Apple. I have NEVER had a hardware failure outside of a failed hard drive.
And no, I don't hate Microsoft. I have used Microsoft input devices (keyboards and mice) exclusively since 2000 or so. (I also have 2 Dell monitors hooked up to my Mac Pro.) I have an Xbox 360 (and an Xbox before that), and I think it's pretty much the best gaming console available today. I don't have a damn thing against Microsoft. Ok, they let MSIE languish for a few too many years after kicking the crap out of Netscape, and Windows Me really sucked, but hey. That's just execution. I don't have a philosophical problem with them. I think that in the final analysis, Microsoft and Bill Gates did a great service to humanity by essentially creating the computing environment that we now live in. In retrospect, it was actually kind of crucial for the "Wintel" monopoly to take place for a few years and contribute to the democratizing of computing, the cheapness of CPU's, the commoditizing of PC's. We wouldn't be here without Microsoft. And I have to admit that MS is basically fighting the current OS wars with one hand tied behind its back -- the hand of backwards compatibility. Apple made fairly clean breaks in moving to OS X, and again in the move to Intel CPU's; they could do that because their market share was pretty minimal and their brand loyalty was pretty high. Microsoft has never had the luxury of being able to come out with a new Windows and saying "Sorry, a lot of your old programs simply won't work on the new version."
On the "fashionable" issue.... geeze. I have been using (and coveting) Macs since I was in grade school. I always liked them but could never afford them. But I used them at school and at friends' houses. The first Mac that I scrounged in college and actually used regularly was a PowerMac 8100 with an 80MHz PPC CPU. Then I managed to repair an 8600 with a 300MHz CPU, then traded that plus some cash for a Blue and White G3 with a 400MHz Sonnet G4 upgrade. (I promptly spray-painted the blue bits black, because "Bondi Blue" is just WRONG.) I still have that G3/G4 and still have 9.1 and all the best Classic apps installed (I still boot up PageMaker when I want to make a spiffy-looking resumé.) In other words: I have been a Mac Nerd since before Macs were cool. (Well, at least, this iteration of cool.) I have two iPod Nano's (1st gen and 4th gen) but I have NEVER worn the goddamned white earbuds. (I have been a loyal Sony earbud user since the early 90's. They just fit my ears really well.) I am actually somewhat self-conscious about using my MacBook in public, and I have several bumper stickers on the lid to detract from its shiny white trendiness (although stickers on a laptop show a different kind of trendiness... can't win 'em all).
A couple of minor points to all the Mac Hataz out there: We'll blow yo' planet up! Oops, I meant: STFU about the one button mouse, those were gone years ago! And it's "Mac" not "MAC" -- it's not an acronym! "MAC" stands for "Media Access Control" which you would know if you were a REAL computer geek!
I have a Mac Pro (first gen, purchased used on eBay for ~$1100 after Bing Cashback, upgraded from 2.0GHz to 2.66GHz Xeons using Anand's guide -- and actually made a profit selling the 2.0GHz Xeons for more than I paid for the 2.66GHz ones -- upgraded to a Radeon HD3870 with an Arctic Cooling fanless heatsink) and a MacBook (first gen Core Duo, purchased at great discount when the Core 2 Duos came out, maxed with 2GB RAM and a 500GB HDD). I bought my first PC (a Compaq laptop, Presario 1672, with a 350Mhz AMD K6-2, that I later upgraded to a 450Mhz K6-2+) in 1999 when I entered college and built my first desktop PC in 2001 (PC Chips dual CPU motherboard, started with a Celeron 850Mhz overclocked to 133FSB (1.13GHz) and then later with dual PIII 900's). Before that I used my family's K6 300MHz and before that, a 16MHz 386SX. Since then, I have built probably 20 or more PC's for friends, family, and my jobs. From small form factor ASUS desktop machines to 4U rackmount dual Opteron monsters, I have done it all, from scratch, with my own two hands. A couple of years ago I single-handedly installed a rack of 20-some-odd new Dell PowerEdge 1650's and 2650's in a colo facility. I have installed Windows 98, 98SE, Me, 2000, XP, and Vista from scratch. Oh and before that, DOS 6.22, Windows 3.1 and OS/2 Warp v3. I was editing my CONFIG.SYS and AUTOEXEC.BAT when I was 12 years old. Don't tell me that I don't know Microsoft. On the Open Source side, I have installed and used Mandrake Linux 7 through 10, Red Hat 8, and FreeBSD 4.x, 5.x, and 6.x. And on the Mac side (starting with thrown-away Macs I picked up in the halls at college) OS 7, 8.6, 9.1, 10.1, 10.2, 10.3, 10.4, 10.5, and 10.6.
I have old machines sitting out in my garage that I have picked up cheap on Craigslist just because i wanted a SPARC or an Alpha to play with. In college I had a stack of obsolete Macs stacked in the corner of the kitchen. Right now sitting at my desk I can see 5 computers: 1) Mac Pro 2) MacBook 3) PC in sig 4) HP laptop I'm fixing for my sister 5) SFF Linux machine from my old job that I'm keeping for backup purposes. I've got a stack of about 15 hard drives sitting on various shelves, and had more before I sold some in the FS/FT forums last year. I've got 3 shelves full of O'Reilly and other programming/sysadmin books. I've been reading AnandTech since roughly 2001 and bought some of my first PC components (Nvidia GeForce2 GTS-V from Newegg and my blue Antec "Dragon" SX1080 case, still in use to this day, containing the PC in my sig -- purchased from SVC) from deals on the Hot Deals forum, back when SlickDeals and FatWallet were still upstarts.
In other words... I am not a computing moron. No, I'm not a sysadmin for my day job (although at one point that was included in my job description as one of many hats that I wore) and I've never hacked on the Linux kernel, but I've got a LOT of experience in computing in general.
It's just that I happen to like Macs! I've got UNIX, I've got the nicest-looking GUI I've ever seen, I've got speed, I've got smoothness, all the fonts are brilliantly anti-aliased and the drop shadows on all the windows just make everything so nice to look at. Would I be horribly put out if Mac OS X dropped off the face of the earth tomorrow and I were forced to install Windows or Linux as my main desktop system? No, of course not. I think that innovation has mostly disappeared from the desktop OS scene since... oh, I don't know, 1998 or so? I pretty much see the last decade as refinement, refinement, refinement. First we had to get to where we weren't crashing all the time. Now that's pretty much taken care of, so it's a matter of making everything easier easier easier to use, and prettier prettier prettier to look at. And that's where Mac OS X excels. Really, it just works, and in a way that I generally like. No, I'm not a big fan of the Dock, and I think MS was retarded to copy it in Windows 7, but Exposé and Spotlight work better than anything I've seen anywhere else. I have NEVER had a problem with an OS update from Apple. I have NEVER had a hardware failure outside of a failed hard drive.
And no, I don't hate Microsoft. I have used Microsoft input devices (keyboards and mice) exclusively since 2000 or so. (I also have 2 Dell monitors hooked up to my Mac Pro.) I have an Xbox 360 (and an Xbox before that), and I think it's pretty much the best gaming console available today. I don't have a damn thing against Microsoft. Ok, they let MSIE languish for a few too many years after kicking the crap out of Netscape, and Windows Me really sucked, but hey. That's just execution. I don't have a philosophical problem with them. I think that in the final analysis, Microsoft and Bill Gates did a great service to humanity by essentially creating the computing environment that we now live in. In retrospect, it was actually kind of crucial for the "Wintel" monopoly to take place for a few years and contribute to the democratizing of computing, the cheapness of CPU's, the commoditizing of PC's. We wouldn't be here without Microsoft. And I have to admit that MS is basically fighting the current OS wars with one hand tied behind its back -- the hand of backwards compatibility. Apple made fairly clean breaks in moving to OS X, and again in the move to Intel CPU's; they could do that because their market share was pretty minimal and their brand loyalty was pretty high. Microsoft has never had the luxury of being able to come out with a new Windows and saying "Sorry, a lot of your old programs simply won't work on the new version."
On the "fashionable" issue.... geeze. I have been using (and coveting) Macs since I was in grade school. I always liked them but could never afford them. But I used them at school and at friends' houses. The first Mac that I scrounged in college and actually used regularly was a PowerMac 8100 with an 80MHz PPC CPU. Then I managed to repair an 8600 with a 300MHz CPU, then traded that plus some cash for a Blue and White G3 with a 400MHz Sonnet G4 upgrade. (I promptly spray-painted the blue bits black, because "Bondi Blue" is just WRONG.) I still have that G3/G4 and still have 9.1 and all the best Classic apps installed (I still boot up PageMaker when I want to make a spiffy-looking resumé.) In other words: I have been a Mac Nerd since before Macs were cool. (Well, at least, this iteration of cool.) I have two iPod Nano's (1st gen and 4th gen) but I have NEVER worn the goddamned white earbuds. (I have been a loyal Sony earbud user since the early 90's. They just fit my ears really well.) I am actually somewhat self-conscious about using my MacBook in public, and I have several bumper stickers on the lid to detract from its shiny white trendiness (although stickers on a laptop show a different kind of trendiness... can't win 'em all).
A couple of minor points to all the Mac Hataz out there: We'll blow yo' planet up! Oops, I meant: STFU about the one button mouse, those were gone years ago! And it's "Mac" not "MAC" -- it's not an acronym! "MAC" stands for "Media Access Control" which you would know if you were a REAL computer geek!