Jondalar
Chieftain
I'm a PC person, but I hate being one. I would much rather have a Mac desktop and laptop. Unfortunately, the fact that I can get a PC for about 1/3 of the price has prevented me from pursuing a Mac.
Jondaler said:I'm a PC person, but I hate being one. I would much rather have a Mac desktop and laptop. Unfortunately, the fact that I can get a PC for about 1/3 of the price has prevented me from pursuing a Mac.
Plus, many programs that are used (mainly games) can only run only on windows (Granted there are still ported versions).I think that is one of the main factors here. Macs may appeal to more people than it seems, just those people chose a PC due to their budget.
^Alright, I'm too lazy to respond, this guy is crazy, and I don't like this thread. Why do you really hate macs? What did they do to you? Whatever, the platform wars should end.
There's a start, lets keep on going. Again:
Keep on going people...let's end the platform wars please and just talk about preferences without bashing.![]()
Don't forget that PowerMacs were the fastest "PCs" in the world, and the first 64 bit "PCs" - but Intel Macs are definitely not PCs.A perfect of example of one of Apple's bullshlt marketing practices was revealed when they switched their processors from IBM to Intel chips. Previously, it was Apple's great privilege to tout their hardware as four times faster than Intel-based Windows systems using comparable hardware (in terms of CPU clock and RAM). When the Intel-based Macs were released, Apple began touting their new line of computers as four times faster than their older IBM-based systems using comparable hardware.
For myself, I love to either have games running at the same time as other applications (so I can take a break to look at webpages or email, or chat with people, or maybe do something whilst Civilization spends ages thinking...), or quickly play a short game for only a few minutes, so bootcamp either wouldn't work, or mean I'm wasting time rebooting lots. I'm surprised at how popular it seems to be as a solution for needing to run Windows software, even applications (which surely people do want to run at the same time as other apps).Civilization is just about the only game I care to play/have time to play anymore, and apparently that runs fine on Windows+Bootcamp.
For myself, I love to either have games running at the same time as other applications (so I can take a break to look at webpages or email, or chat with people, or maybe do something whilst Civilization spends ages thinking...), or quickly play a short game for only a few minutes, so bootcamp either wouldn't work, or mean I'm wasting time rebooting lots. I'm surprised at how popular it seems to be as a solution for needing to run Windows software, even applications (which surely people do want to run at the same time as other apps).
Hell, these days it's common not to reboot computers at all, let alone everytime you want to play a game. It's like stepping back in time to the 1980s where you only ran one application/game at a time, and rebooted in between...
I'd only consider using emulation / a virtual machine.
Though the downside with trying to run Mac OS X on an emulation and/or a virtual machine is that it takes more steps to get it to work. The downside with PearPC is that it does not emulate sound (Plus there are extra steps to partition the virtual harddisk). As for the VMware products, I am not sure if its 100% workable, even with an x86 version of Mac OS X.I'd only consider using emulation / a virtual machine.
I think he meant the exact opposite of that (i.e. emulating Windows on MacOSX), which can be done easily using Qemu or Parallels. As far as I know, there is not a version of VMWare available for MacOSX, and VirtualPC only runs on the PowerPC version of MacOSX.CivGeneral said:Though the downside with trying to run Mac OS X on an emulation and/or a virtual machine is that it takes more steps to get it to work. The downside with PearPC is that it does not emulate sound (Plus there are extra steps to partition the virtual harddisk).
Not even VMware Fusion for Macs?
I don't know how many times this thread has appeared here, but I've never seen it. So, what do you prefer? Mac or PC? For me, it is certainly a PC.![]()
I guess that is due to my first computer being a PC, but Macs are just foreign ... 1 mouse button, can't make your own, and I really don't like those (well, I have to admit they are funny) "Hello, I'm a Mac. And I'm a PC" adverts - they make the PC guy look like a complete idiot who can only do office work, and the Mac guy look cool. I won't go on anymore, not just yet...
Oh - and try and give at least one reason for your choice![]()
Hmm, have they updated Bootcamp so you can run applications alongside Mac applications (i.e., at the same time)?Honestly, I'm not seeing the problem here. I already have a full suite of MS Office software, I could just, you know, install it on a Mac if I wanted to play around while I "worked".
I don't agree at all, at least as far as XP is concerned (I don't know if you meant Vista specifically). Classic MacOS was rather poor (didn't even have a CLI at all, let alone a decent one), and Windows 3.1 was a joke.The interface for Mac OS X is nicer than Vista. Vista is prettier than XP but it's still ugly compared to Mac OS X and still a trainwreck of usability and cohesiveness compared Win 3.1 or Mac OS 7 or zsh under a GNU/*NIX system...
Apple are the worst offenders when it comes to not following the OS style when writing Windows applications! (Itunes, Quicktime.)People who makes apps for Mac OS X put more effort into to making them match the style and procedure of the OS than 3rd party software writers seem to do for Windows (or GNOME or KDE...); this is however changing for the worse (partly due to Apple's own increasingly bad example of not following Interface Guidelines, even in spirit).
GCC exists on Windows.Cocoa & Obj-C > .NET & C++, IMHO. Pretty close and Apple's almost dropping the ball.
GCC & C-libraries which, you know, accurately reflect the C standards, > Visual Studio Student Crippled-Edition & MS's borked C libraries.
Some Windows applications can be dragged and dropped too - but what really confuses me is why this is touted as being easier. I dislike it when I have to manually find a place for my application (and it's poorer imo from a user-friendly point of view). Much easier just to doubleclick on the icon.Installation, package managers, hmm... Mac OS X doesn't get this right but it's not too bad; most apps are perfectly well served by drag-and-drop (I don't care about the odd 4KB .plist [XML FILE, DAMNIT! A HELPFUL FORM OF DATA STORAGE...) being left over)