Printable Version | Subscribe | Add to Favourites
<<  1    2  >>
New Topic New Poll New Reply
Author: Subject: MAC PC MAC PC?
ReMan

posted on 27/6/12 at 06:02 PM Reply With Quote
MAC PC MAC PC?

The family workhorse PC is creaking and needs replacing.
I've spent the last 20 years building playing and maintaining Microsoft and PC hardware, so am fairly clued up.
I'll still have access to a.nother PC and laptip but this is the one that gets most use.
It's used for everything, Internat, mail, family pictures a few games, Office, online casino, music, video you name it, though nothing too cutting edge, but nothing too paid for either ;-)
We quite fancy a change to an iMac, for interest and education and that they look great

The question is:
Assuming I take the plunge and learn to use it,

How long, or will there be something I will find that it won't do that a PC will?





www.plusnine.co.uk
∙،°. ˘Ô≈ôﺣ

View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
JC

posted on 27/6/12 at 06:09 PM Reply With Quote
Never if you use bootcamp and install windows on a separate partition! However, I've used Macs for years and never missed anything and have never bothered with bootcamp!
View User's Profile E-Mail User Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
mookaloid

posted on 27/6/12 at 06:11 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by ReMan


How long, or will there be something I will find that it won't do that a PC will?


it won't do all that the pc will do for the same money as a pc ......





"That thing you're thinking - it wont be that."


View User's Profile E-Mail User View All Posts By User U2U Member
yellowcab

posted on 27/6/12 at 06:14 PM Reply With Quote
Go Mac - never look back.

27 incher all the way.

/that is all






View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
mangogrooveworkshop

posted on 27/6/12 at 06:26 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by yellowcab
Go Mac - never look back.

27 incher all the way.

/that is all



THE BEST 27" IVE EVER HAD …….. Is my Mac






View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
deltron63

posted on 27/6/12 at 06:27 PM Reply With Quote
You must be clue'd up if you can use a " laptip "
View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
ReMan

posted on 27/6/12 at 06:31 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by deltron63
You must be clue'd up if you can use a " laptip "

My laptip is good for the internat





www.plusnine.co.uk
∙،°. ˘Ô≈ôﺣ

View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
ReMan

posted on 27/6/12 at 06:36 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by JC
Never if you use bootcamp and install windows on a separate partition! However, I've used Macs for years and never missed anything and have never bothered with bootcamp!


I forgot about that, but I did'nt realise it was so well supported, almost encouraged on the apple site.

"it won't do all that the pc will do for the same money as a pc ...... "

I'm seriously considering a (only just) used one to take the sting out of the difference.

These 2 things could tip it....





www.plusnine.co.uk
∙،°. ˘Ô≈ôﺣ

View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
scootz

posted on 27/6/12 at 06:38 PM Reply With Quote
It'll drive your family nuts until they get the hang of it, but stick with it and you'll never go back to a PC!





It's Evolution Baby!

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
VinceGledhill

posted on 27/6/12 at 06:47 PM Reply With Quote
I have a 27 inch iMac and wouldn't go back.

I actually have a PC with it's monitor sitting on the same desk. I use it to run some lighting software that is only PC (not duel booted the mac can't see the point)

How many have had a mac and swapped to PC? Not many I bet. I can't see me swapping back any time soon.

It just runs, it's on all the time and doesn't slow down for anything. Superb. Getting used to the file system was the only thing I couldn't get my head around at first but apart from that....

You can even get auto cad for the mac now.





Regards
Vince Gledhill
Time Served Auto Electrician
Lucas Leeds 1979-1983

View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
Wadders

posted on 27/6/12 at 07:14 PM Reply With Quote
If you actually enjoy faffing with the inner workings, repairing when they go wrong, fighting viruses and figuring out why your printer/scanner /phone etc software won't talk to your computer probably better stick with a PC.....

On the other hand if you just want something that works out of the box, never goes wrong, and just does what it should
then in the spirit of your post title.....MAC MAC MAC MAC


Al

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
balidey

posted on 27/6/12 at 09:26 PM Reply With Quote
I've never uses a Mac, so can't comment on that. But I gave up on Windows years ago. I switched to Ubuntu and so far have found only ONE bit of hardware that wouldn't work (a USB printer switch that I didn't need in the end). Ubuntu costs zero, and its very forgiving on older PC's. Infact all my PC's are old cast offs from people who ran windows and they 'died'. A fresh install of Ubuntu has them running better than new.
So my advice, before spending loads of money, you have already consigned the PC to the bin, why not install Ubuntu, give it a run for a couple of months, then decide what to buy with the money you've saved.





Dutch bears have terrible skin due to their clogged paws

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
AntonUK

posted on 27/6/12 at 09:52 PM Reply With Quote
Like you I have been a PC/Windows guy, building, repairing etc for years.

Recently wanted to try a mac, with the plan to bootcamp it for anything i might need on the windows platform.

My shiney macbook pro 15" arrived 3 weeks ago and i can thoroughly recommend it... everything just works and its easy.

Only used bootcamp partition for OBDII software and MS publisher (as the missus refuses to use swift publisher)





Build Photos Here

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
VinceGledhill

posted on 27/6/12 at 11:32 PM Reply With Quote
You can get office on the mac, what about publisher?





Regards
Vince Gledhill
Time Served Auto Electrician
Lucas Leeds 1979-1983

View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
vanepico

posted on 27/6/12 at 11:38 PM Reply With Quote
Yeah they are more reliable but they cost 3 or 4 times more and you can't do lots of stuff. My hp keeps going wrong though so it is all relative
View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
VinceGledhill

posted on 27/6/12 at 11:42 PM Reply With Quote
Seems to me that most people that knock the mac have never had one.

Many a mac user is ex PC and wouldn't go back.





Regards
Vince Gledhill
Time Served Auto Electrician
Lucas Leeds 1979-1983

View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
Davey D

posted on 28/6/12 at 05:26 AM Reply With Quote
I think the best way to sum this up is: if you want a computer get a PC... If you want a Mac then get a mac
View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
t11

posted on 28/6/12 at 05:52 AM Reply With Quote
mac

Hi I've been using a mac for years now got a second hand mac book pro 17ins and would never go back to a pc had 5 or 6 of them and they all went wrong......MAC
View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
hughpinder

posted on 28/6/12 at 08:29 AM Reply With Quote
Get a mac, but buy refurbished direct from apple - you get a better warranty than a standard new one and I've never had a problem:
http://store.apple.com/uk/browse/home/specialdeals/mac

It is true that you pay more than the minimum you would for a windows PC by a factor of 3, but if you compare to a comparable hardware specification of say dell / sony you won't be buying the cheapest range, but close to the top range - say £800 for the microsoft machine vs say £1000 for the mac. Don't go too mad for extra memory unless you are doing HD video editing or something very memory intensive all the time, (or intend to run windows a lot), you don't need it. If you want more add it later from crucial or kingston as its much cheaper. To see how to get into the cases of most apple kit go to the www.ifixit.com site. some are much easier than you might think to upgrade ram/hdd. You also get the full software disk, whereas you oftem find you don't with a microsoft machine. OS version upgrades are comparable to windows ultimate and cost about £40. Your mac will still have some resale value when its old - I recently sold my 6 year old G4 laptop with non working screen and damaged case for £150.

I strongly recommend that you buy the oreilly book "OSX the missing manual" for the version of OSX you buy. You get loads of useful stuff on how to do things in there. If you want to know how thing work before lashing out on the computer buy the book first and read it.

You can get an osx specific port of openoffice, or neooffice so you don't want to pay for ms office. You do get a nagging worry that something wont be compatible with microsoft office if you do, the same way you do on linux/a pc.

I worried about not having windows for a while and installed XP/vista/7 on a partition, but can't remember ever using it except for megasquirt set up.

I'm not sure what the comment " if you want a computer get a PC... If you want a Mac then get a mac" means - they are both computers, the difference is that with a mac you use it to do something rather than the computer itself being the thing you do, if you get my drift.

If you want to get into the OS, you can go in via a terminal/console window and get into the guts exactly as you can in linux, so if you have that level of knowlege you can install many linux packages.

Regards
Hugh

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
ashg

posted on 28/6/12 at 10:18 AM Reply With Quote
i have been a pc user all my life. about 6months ago i got a mac book air as the price was right and i wanted something extremely light small and powerful (i7 processor lots of ram ssd hdd etc)

i also have a win7 desktop pc, laptop running xp and a netbook running ubuntu. recently i found when i need to use a computer the first thing i pick-up is the mac.

don't get me wrong it took me a while to get used to it but i stuck with it rather than boot camping it. little things like you cant cut and paste. you can either copy and paste or drag and drop if you want to move a file into a different folder. but other than little niggles like that to begin with i wouldn't change it for any other device.

as for cost well its subjective, apple do use very good hardware in their machines, and to build a pc using stuff made by the same manufacturers would cost almost as much.

i am now at the point where if i were to replace my desktop pc i wouldn't even hesitate and just buy a mac. I love that i get the friendly just work GUI (easy like windows) but when i want to get clever i can open a terminal window and feel like i am working on my ubuntu box in flat out unix



[Edited on 28/6/2012 by ashg]





Anything With Tits or Wheels Will cost you MONEY!!

Haynes Roadster (Finished)
Exocet (Finished & Sold)
New Project (Started)

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
MikeRJ

posted on 28/6/12 at 10:23 AM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by VinceGledhill
Seems to me that most people that knock the mac have never had one.

Many a mac user is ex PC and wouldn't go back.


My brother had a Mac Book and then a Mac mini, but after picking up a Shuttle PC system cheap both gathered dust and he has recently sold both. Mac's are ok for for most mainstream users e.g. office stuff, email, browsing etc. but they still lack support for a lot of the more niche stuff.

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
ashg

posted on 28/6/12 at 10:48 AM Reply With Quote
actually i think the opposite mike

mac's are for the general user and the hardcore user but dont really fit the intermediate users.

e.g users that know their way round a pc pretty well but are not what i would call an expert. un-fortunately the mass majority of people working in the IT industry i would class as intermediate users, i would even go as far as saying some of these people would claim themselves as professionals are not any more than than self made up intermediate users.

if my mac wont do what i want it to do in the gui (not that it happens, unless im fiddling) i would open a terminal window and do it at the command prompt if that didn't work then i would code it. lots of people don't realise, just because it doesn't have a pretty click box doesn't mean you cant do it another way.

i am currently working on a project to port a couple of windows developed apps into a Linux environment which requires getting .net 4.0 into linux. currently they run on a windows virtual machine installed on linux, if i can make them work without the vm then we can reduce the hardware specs ultimately saving money on hardware for over 1000 devices, meaning more profit.





Anything With Tits or Wheels Will cost you MONEY!!

Haynes Roadster (Finished)
Exocet (Finished & Sold)
New Project (Started)

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
ashg

posted on 28/6/12 at 10:51 AM Reply With Quote
sorry

back on topic

i vote buy a MAC





Anything With Tits or Wheels Will cost you MONEY!!

Haynes Roadster (Finished)
Exocet (Finished & Sold)
New Project (Started)

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
FuryRebuild

posted on 28/6/12 at 11:53 AM Reply With Quote
Right Then!

Lots of good points have been made here, and here area few more to consider

user experience
Firstly, aple spend untold millions on product design and the user experience, and it itterly shows when you use it. The product out of the box is great. the software you get with it is stupendous. the consistent use of gestures in all the software is great - little things like in a browser, flicking three fingers on the (large) trackpad left moves you back. The same gesture in iPhoto scrolls you back through your photos. Little things like dragging text off an app and dropping it on to the desktop automatically creates a text file with that in. When in system prefs, each trackpad gesture comes with a constantly playing video shwing you how to use the gesture and what the difference is, etc.

If you have a laptop, closing the lid instantly puts it to sleep, opening the lid instantly brings it back - apple had this in the design from the very get go. Look at the little things like the chassis is really thin, and there are no crappy clips to hold the lid closed - it's done magnetically.

service and support

You get a year's warranty, and 3 months support when you can call someone up to help you with your transition - it's just in the price. Noone else I know does this. You can extend the warranty out on an annual or more basis.

If you get an issue, you just go to the website and book an appointment at an apple store to get someone to fix it. If it's under warranty they do it *there and then*. All the stores have people there who are trained and qualified to take these to pieces and fix them for you.

windows compatability
I don't use boot-camp but do use vmware when i have to access a windows 7 machine. The machine only consumes 30G, and I have several centos virtual machines in there as well. You can do really useful stuff like copy from an progrram in windows and just flick to a osx programme and paste the text in. If you want to, you can run your windows programs as if they are mac ones in a mac window - no-one would need to see your shame.

build quality

Just go and look at the quality of the monitors, the thinness of the keyboard, the fact that when the keyboard starts to run out of battery, the subtle icon on the screen tells you.

the list just goes on and on and on. And yes, if you tried to spec an i7 quad-core laptop with a retina display, 8G of ram and an SSD anywhere else, you'd struggle to even meet apple's price, yet get under it.





When all you have is a hammer, everything around you is a nail.

www.furyrebuild.co.uk

View User's Profile Visit User's Homepage View All Posts By User U2U Member
hughpinder

posted on 28/6/12 at 12:22 PM Reply With Quote
Just a note from earlier to copy use COMMAND-C to paste COMMAND-V and to cut COMMAND-X, (command is the key with the funny square with a circle at each corner) rather than CONTROL-C etc as on windows.

The O'reilly 'missing manual' thing gives loads of tips like these where windows and osx are different. I like the way you can select for a second screen to be either a 'mirror' or a 'continuation' of your main one for a laptop, and that works for everything. I means if you give a powerpoint presentation using a projector everyone sees the powerpoint on your projector, but on the laptop screen you can have additional notes, browse for things without everyone seeing all the stuff on your computer etc. For photo editing you can have the overview on one screen, and a tiny bit blown up on another which is good. On a windows machine what you can do is very dependant on the application.
Regards
Hugh

View User's Profile View All Posts By User U2U Member
<<  1    2  >>
New Topic New Poll New Reply


go to top






Website design and SEO by Studio Montage

All content © 2001-16 LocostBuilders. Reproduction prohibited
Opinions expressed in public posts are those of the author and do not necessarily represent
the views of other users or any member of the LocostBuilders team.
Running XMB 1.8 Partagium [© 2002 XMB Group] on Apache under CentOS Linux
Founded, built and operated by ChrisW.