strangelove wrote:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Look_and_feel
^ That's what I mean by 'look and feel'. It's a somewhat basic UI term so I assumed you were familiar with it. I'm only mentioning this again because I think you might be under the impression that I'm trying to romanticize UI usage or something; its an actual thing. What I can't wrap my head around is why you believe ignorance to be the only reason people buy Macs (well, I actually do understand why, but your reasoning is petty to say the least). More specifically, it sounds like you're implying that people who buy computers from other manufacturers do so based on reasoned logic outweighing the pros and cons of their purchase. Basically, I think you're projecting your own standards a little too strongly to the general public and that is very unrealistic. People in general don't care what hardware they have, or what score they'll get in 3DMark. Cost is equally unimportant unless they're on a budget. To the average user, these contrivances are irrelevant. As long as they're able to do things they like, they'll be happy, and the computer will have been worth every cent no matter how cheap or expensive it may have been.
I don't believe ignorance is the only reason people buy Macs, but when I said general crowd I meant a group of people who pretty much know nothing about computers. I mean lets face it most people don't. When I ask someone in any of my classes at school why they have a Mac or what they like about it, they'll answer something like "because it doesn't get viruses" or "because it never crashes and it's perfect". I don't think I've gotten a single answer pertaining to the UI or how it is useful to them..I mirror this to the general crowd that buy Macs. Even though it's a pretty big assumption I don't think it's too far from the truth.
I think you're kind of telling the half truth here about consumers. Of course they'll be happy if they can do what they want, but if you mention to them that computer A is technically better than computer B, even though they are the same price, then they'll most likely choose A over B (UI and shit aside..). It makes no sense to take the lesser of the two.
I also don't think cost isn't that unimportant. Most people won't spend $9000 on a Mac or PC regardless if there is some $1000 alternative. Sure to a degree cost isn't that big of a deal, but when one is double or more the price of another I think I'll have to disagree with you.
Azilius wrote:The 'just works' line is bullshit as well because I've seen Macs crash, errors happen and the like.
Unfortunately, 'just works' doesn't mean what you think it does. Also, the iPhone 4's 'Retina Display' won't make blind people see and the iPad is not actually 'Magical', lol. This is the sort of statement I would expect from a technology layman. I mean, you sound like a pretty reasonable guy and you show interest in tech stuff so I can only assume you're familiar with tech marketing talk and you're able to distinguish that from what it actually means, so it's a little surprising to me that this is the sort of flawed logic you've been applying here. I gave you an example in a previous reply of how that specific talking point gets propagated, so I'm guessing you either ignored it or dismissed it.
Aha I know I took that way too literally. Pretend I'm someone who doesn't know much about computers though. I see those mac vs PC commercials all the time and how Macs don't get fatal errors, they never get viruses blah blah blah, they just work! Then I go to a store to buy a computer, well I'd obviously pick the Mac, even though all of those things mentioned in the commercial are far from the truth.
Stress wrote:Also, someone who has only seriously used Windows Operating systems can only have a biased point of view.
As I said earlier..I use Ubuntu mainly on my Laptop for school and other things.
Referring back to your first post, it sounds like you've never used Windows =\
By working on a Mac, you can become, in time, much better at using it, and it can really speed up your work.
The point I'm trying to make is that the Mac - compared to Windows - feels like a whole new world, much more organized, much more logical, much more functional, and with a little bit of practice and time spent with it, significantly more useful and helpful.
If you could, please explain to me how using a Mac will speed up my work, and how it's more useful. I can open an MS word document with spell-check and whatever else in about 3 seconds. I can make 3d models and such in about..3 seconds I can convert media, download things and anything else you can think of. I can do pretty much everything a Mac can in the same or less amount of time (of course there are exceptions that go both ways).
This is where the conversation first let off, and I never got a real answer. Instead you talked about your IBM thinkpad and IPS monitors (and you are clearly ignoring me every time I tell you that you can buy a 23" IPS for the price of a 24" TN). Then it somehow turned into the look and feel factor among other things. If you're telling me that's what's going to speed up my work significantly then I'm in disbelief.






