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Funny. Actually I'm serious. Mac not perfect, Apple a distasteful company, but Mac+OSX better than other computers I've used. Would love to find better still.
Job motivation: how the powerful steal from the stupid.
Funny. Actually I'm serious. Mac not perfect, Apple a distasteful company, but Mac+OSX better than other computers I've used. Would love to find better still.
Take any suitable hardware and install Linux. Big improvement.
Take any suitable hardware and install Linux. Big improvement.
I've tried it. I really wanted to like it. But there were too many little things that just didn't work out of the box. I absolutely despise using an advertising tag line, but (IME) the Mac does "just work". I can't remember anything that didn't work first time on it.
Example: external DVD player: on my Windows Thinkpad, it played DVDs but had no sound. On the Mac it just worked. On Ubuntu it didn't even recognise it was attached until I "mounted" it.
OK I can "mount" it. On Windows I can download the audio codec and it works. But I don't want to have to do some extra work with every little thing I do.
And don't get me started on scanners
Job motivation: how the powerful steal from the stupid.
OK I can "mount" it. On Windows I can download the audio codec and it works. But I don't want to have to do some extra work with every little thing I do.
That is the crux of the matter. MS seems to think we enjoy installing software. I have only done one "wipe and reinstall from scratch" in the eight and a half years I have owned Macs, and I only did that because I wanted to, not because it was necessary. (I will note that I got a surprising amount of disk space back, presumably down to clutter left behind from software I had tried but never ended up using.)
Or USB sticks. I am really not interested in seeing an announcement that a driver has been installed and I can now use a USB stick. On a Mac it simply appears and I can use it straight away.
Behold the warranty -- the bold print giveth and the fine print taketh away.
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