Originally posted by: Chiropteran
Originally posted by: sourceninja
If I had to support dells (and I do) I would have a dell (and we do). Obviously your job and a mac do not mix.
And while I support Dells, I have never used one as my desktop, instead running a custom built computer. I honestly don't see the need to run a Dell to support Dells. As long as my computer can accept and read Dell hard drives, and run some version of Windows, it'll work. My current custom built PC does this, and based on what I have read the Mac Pro will also do it. However, a Mac laptop wouldn't, an iMac wouldn't, and a Mac-mini wouldn't. so they aren't viable options.
Originally posted by: sourceninja
Just like I have to keep windows around for somethings to do my job (where as at home I am mac/linux only). The good news is that you can run linux from a firewire/usb/external sata drive (btw, some of those cards use plain old sata connectors). There are tons of ways around the problem, but really it wouldn't be worth it. Support the platform you need to support with the same platform. We have about 100 macs on campus and 1000 windows machines. Guess what makes sense for our support staff to use. Rather then go mac for everyone with a lone windows machine for support to use on windows issues, the opposite was the best idea. Even if mac pro's were 500.00 it simply would not be a good idea.
On the other hand, as a developer, having the mac is useful to me, so I have one.
It's like trying to switch to linux as a hard core gamer, just a bad idea.
Have you heard of bootcamp? I can run windows fine on the Mac. The opposite is not true, I can't run Mac OS X on a Dell or my custom built Core 2 Duo PC.
What makes more sense to you? Run Windows on a Windows-only PC, remain unable to support Mac OS X? Run Mac OS X, be unable to support Windows? Or... dual boot Mac OS X & Windows, support both fine?
Yeah, I suppose an alternative would be a Mac Mini + a Dell + external hard drive adapters + a KVM and a switch on my desktop, but the waste of office space and extra mess hardly justifies saving $500 from simply buying a Mac Pro and having a single box without any loose components to worry about.