Re: NFC Apple Vs PC | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Larry (l02turner![]() |
|
Date: Sat, 21 Jan 2012 16:14:46 -0800 (PST) |
Adam,
Fantastic write up â how long have you been working for
Mac? (just kidding)
![]() As an aside, You mentioned MS Office â Iâve been
transitioning to Open Source software and have been happy with their âOffice
Suiteâ.
It sounds like I need to convert to MAC and not worry â
my peripherals are all USB â so there should be no problem. MS let
me down because I discovered the new desktop I bought (recently returned because
it died) which came with Win7 64Bit â which I found does not support my scanner
at all and has to be run using a less capable driver so I lose
functionality. I know MS doesnât write drivers for peripherals but IMO
they should agree with major manufacturers if there will be drivers for
mainstream printers, scanners, etc for a headline OS upgrade!
Iâm talking about a printer, scanner and maybe a set of pedals and steering
wheel (Ferrari labeled) which I am really looking forward to using but need to
buy a good racing game that has LeMans track and cars as a basis. But
thatâs not important here -
Besides, Iâve always heard MAC is the way to go for
graphics, etc.
Mostly I want to get some machines that run and run and
run â MS seems to constantly crash, BSOD, make me worry about Trojans, hackers,
etc. â I know no system is immune but hopefully MAC is less so.
Thanks again Adam â sounds like Iâm not the only one
considering making a change - your write-up is a keeper -
LarryT
From: Adam Green
Sent: Saturday, January 21, 2012 3:51 PM
To: Larry Turner
Cc: The FerrariList
Subject: Re: [Ferrari] NFC Apple Vs PC I've
been researching the same move for one particular (and expensive) machine that's
sort of letting the team down a bit lately. I think Windows vs Mac
includes some Google versus Apple decisions. If you're Google-centric
(Chrome, Android) then Mac isn't so compelling. If you're more interested
in applications or music and movies, then Mac wins hands down and Google is just
as good on either platform. In either case, Windows has no compelling
value or advantage in price or performance from a branded machine like Dell,
which generally scores poorly on reliability and support, as does IBM and
Lenovo, as does Toshiba and HP/Compaq ... : |
The only question would be any application that's on Windows and not on
Mac. There's not many these days, but there are some important ones, so
you have to check your footprint of applications and licenses. Microsoft
Office and Intuit Quickbooks are two that keep at least one Windows machine in
the house for me.
If you want a killer laptop, MacBook Pro is by far and away the best of the
best and delivers top shelf performance. Technology unveiled at CES two
weeks ago will arrive throughout 2012, but it could be very late in the year
before the laptop market reflects these new machines and really, if you want a
super thin and light, the MacBook Air is the best of the best and has the
processor power that previous versions lacked. If you want an actual
desktop (desk-side tower) it's a matter of choosing operating systems because
the machine price/performance ratios aren't compelling. Apple will be more
expensive, but you get a turn-key machine with no compromise on performance plus
a local store for support and applecare as a service contract (well worth the
money.)
I run mostly Mac OS X 10.6 (Snow Leopard) but have one MacBook Pro (this
thing under my fingers) running Lion. Once you're accustomed to the
convenience and simplicity of the Mac, the PC becomes subjectively all the more
painfully cumbersome, even when running the same applications.
Since the "Sandy Bridge" Intel architecture came into the Macs, their raw
performance is as good as it gets, so any price/performance advantage to a PC is
whittled down to a negligible degree except for technical applications. If
you want to compare performance, look at geekbench and run it on your current
machines to see just how surprisingly slow they are and how fast a new Mac
performs.
Keep in mind you can always run Windows "on" a Mac (either by installing
both Mac OS X and Windows on the same Mac, or by installing an application
called Parallels which creates a virtual environment in which Windows runs
happily and is perfectly stable and fast, at least in my experience.)
As for compatibility, if the peripherals are recent models or just about
anything using USB, they'll work and backward compatibility isn't painful.
You can always check their respective support site and look for the necessary
Mac OS X drivers. Usually, it's just a matter of plugging it in and
bingo.
The Apple Store "Genius" staff can schedule an appointment to make the
transition for you. I think it's free. They'll take your old laptop,
do a backup, fire up the new Mac and transfer as much or as little as you wish,
right down to browser passwords and history, etc. I even seen people with
a delivery cart bringing in their old desk-side PC tower and monitor ... I think
Apple has decided it's a strategic win to suffer the cost of literally helping
each user one by one to "make the switch" as they say.
If you're reasonably competent and sure you can backup and restore your
current machine, it doesn't require a trip to a store.
I'm currently debating updating an old Windows PC to a 12 core Mac
Pro. The Mac is over $5K, but the two year old PC cost that much and it
benchmarks about the same as my new MacBook Pro for half the price.
Sheesh. The Mac Pro is twice as
fast for the same money after two years. Computers are cheap. My
rationalization to update is that the Mac Pro can mean an all Mac environment
and run Windows on Parallels for those tasks and still deliver high performance
(Parallels costs less than 10% according my geekbench comparisons ... a 10,500
score on OS X becomes a 10,000 score when running Windows 7 or Ubuntu 10 on
Parallels 7.)
If you have older Windows applications, you'll most likely have to pay to
update licenses to new versions and "migrate" to the Mac OS X platform.
This is tedious or as streamlined, case by case, depending upon the software
vendor and their state of health. For example, I still run a PC with
Quickbooks and Quicken for lack of convenient migration path. I think
Intuit is healthy and moving to win back their Mac users, but we'll see.
For now, I see no luxury in having the accounting on a Mac, so nothing is
broken. All of these machines can "see" and share files and printers and
backups, so there's no leap forward.
I should add that the new "App Store" approach to the Mac is turning out to
be a really nice way to sift through the otherwise insurmountable hundreds of
thousands of seemingly identical applications on offer. There's also the
joy of not having everything preceded by a virus scan or an update to repair or
replace software broken or out of date on the Windows 7 box. I have a
pretty stable environment on the Windows machines, but the intrusion of virus
threats can be a little tedious. So far, so good and it's all free
software, it's just a bit clunky compared to the way OS X is so quiet and
unobtrusive about its updates.
And the final "win" I'll score to Apple is the integration of the iPhone,
iPad, iTunes, Apple TV and Mac. It's finally at a point where almost
anything you have is available to each device with little or no effort. I
should mention I recently moved to a Google phone (the grandly titled
Galaxy Nexus) and the integration with the Mac is just as good. I think
Google is going to finally challenge Apple now that Chrome really works and
Android (the equivalent of iOS on the iPhone) is, in my humble, easier to use
than iOS ... ironically, the "best" new features on the iPhone 4 are old news to
Android users (except Siri, which is great ... Google voice command isn't as
clever, but it does work for calls and navigation, even reads email, etc.)
The thing Apple products don't understand is having multiple users for the
same device like an iPhone or iPad or Apple TV ... these all assume one user
(even though they have the appearance of multiple users, it doesn't work out
very well.) Google TV and Google Chrome (their operating system equivalent
of Mac OS or Windows, as well as a browser) assume each user has a login and
completely separate interests, then Google+ handles sharing and communication --
infinitely less painful than Facebook, which my kids have finally, thankfully,
deleted from their lives, if only because their friends have gone
counter-culture and decided that FB is not cool.
To answer your question: "should be fine." : )
Adam On Sat, Jan 21, 2012 at 11:11 AM, Larry <l02turner [at] comcast.net>
wrote:
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- Re: NFC Apple Vs PC, (continued)
-
Re: NFC Apple Vs PC Adam Green, January 21 2012
-
Re: NFC Apple Vs PC Peter Pless, January 21 2012
- Re: NFC Apple Vs PC Michael Lambert, January 21 2012
- Re: NFC Apple Vs PC Adam Green, January 21 2012
-
Re: NFC Apple Vs PC Peter Pless, January 21 2012
- Re: NFC Apple Vs PC Larry, January 21 2012
- Re: NFC Apple Vs PC E M, January 21 2012
- Re: NFC Apple Vs PC Peter Pless, January 21 2012
- Re: NFC Apple Vs PC Robert W. Garven Jr., January 21 2012
- Re: NFC Apple Vs PC Doug and Terri Anderson, January 21 2012
-
Re: NFC Apple Vs PC Adam Green, January 21 2012
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