CurseTheSky
Diamond Member
Several weeks ago, I made a thread here since I was toying with the idea of getting a Macbook Pro. Between several software discrepancies and a few hardware complaints (low res screen on the 13", 15" with high res screen is too expensive), I gave up on the idea.
However, I've heard some new information that's giving me the itch again. I'm considering grabbing a Macbook Air if the refresh is worthwhile (Sandy Bridge, 7+ hours of battery life, 4GB+ memory, 128GB+ SSD, 1440x900 screen, etc.), but I have a few questions and concerns first.
- My #1 reason for giving up on Macs was the Contrl / Command / etc. keys. I'm far too used to Ctrl + Z/X/C/V/A/S/etc. on Windows, and I can't imagine trying to press what would be the Alt key instead. However, I heard from someone on one of these forums that you can switch the "command" keys around in OSX. Is that true? Could I swap the places of the Command and Control keys using software, so that it would be similar to a Windows keyboard layout? Will this work for external keyboards as well?
- Is there a decent, fairly cheap, and reliable virus scan available? I know OSX isn't targeted anywhere near as much as Windows is, but I'm not really keen on going completely "naked." Something similar to Microsoft Security Essentials or Avira, paid or free, would be great. What about independent malware scanners like Malware Bytes?
- I'm going to be upgrading my copy of Photoshop CS2 to CS5 soon, and because all of my computers are currently Windows-based, I'm going to grab a Windows copy. I'll most likely grab a copy of VMWare Fusion + an extra copy of Windows 7 to load on the Mac. Will Photoshop work flawlessly in the virtual machine?
- Any decent Thunderbolt single external hard drives on the horizon? The Pegasus R4 / R6 that Anand did a review on is really nice, but it's way out of my usage and price range. That is, of course, assuming that the next Macbook Air gets a Thunderbolt port. USB 2.0 is far too slow, and these things don't even have Firewire, let alone USB 3.0 or eSATA.
- Any reason why I SHOULDN'T consider a Macbook Air? For example, sub-par build quality compared to other Macs, overheating, etc. I will most likely be keeping my current Envy 14 as a work laptop, so this would be more for portability and personal use. I'd still like it to have enough power for basic tasks and very light gaming. In all honestly, I'd probably just grab a Macbook Pro 13" if it wasn't for that low-res screen.
Thanks. 🙂
However, I've heard some new information that's giving me the itch again. I'm considering grabbing a Macbook Air if the refresh is worthwhile (Sandy Bridge, 7+ hours of battery life, 4GB+ memory, 128GB+ SSD, 1440x900 screen, etc.), but I have a few questions and concerns first.
- My #1 reason for giving up on Macs was the Contrl / Command / etc. keys. I'm far too used to Ctrl + Z/X/C/V/A/S/etc. on Windows, and I can't imagine trying to press what would be the Alt key instead. However, I heard from someone on one of these forums that you can switch the "command" keys around in OSX. Is that true? Could I swap the places of the Command and Control keys using software, so that it would be similar to a Windows keyboard layout? Will this work for external keyboards as well?
- Is there a decent, fairly cheap, and reliable virus scan available? I know OSX isn't targeted anywhere near as much as Windows is, but I'm not really keen on going completely "naked." Something similar to Microsoft Security Essentials or Avira, paid or free, would be great. What about independent malware scanners like Malware Bytes?
- I'm going to be upgrading my copy of Photoshop CS2 to CS5 soon, and because all of my computers are currently Windows-based, I'm going to grab a Windows copy. I'll most likely grab a copy of VMWare Fusion + an extra copy of Windows 7 to load on the Mac. Will Photoshop work flawlessly in the virtual machine?
- Any decent Thunderbolt single external hard drives on the horizon? The Pegasus R4 / R6 that Anand did a review on is really nice, but it's way out of my usage and price range. That is, of course, assuming that the next Macbook Air gets a Thunderbolt port. USB 2.0 is far too slow, and these things don't even have Firewire, let alone USB 3.0 or eSATA.
- Any reason why I SHOULDN'T consider a Macbook Air? For example, sub-par build quality compared to other Macs, overheating, etc. I will most likely be keeping my current Envy 14 as a work laptop, so this would be more for portability and personal use. I'd still like it to have enough power for basic tasks and very light gaming. In all honestly, I'd probably just grab a Macbook Pro 13" if it wasn't for that low-res screen.
Thanks. 🙂