MAC. Hands down. No contest.
Unless you want more issues, more viruses, more problems all around. Then, by all means, go with a PC.
MAC. Hands down. No contest.
Unless you want more issues, more viruses, more problems all around. Then, by all means, go with a PC.
Admittedly I haven't done a full investigation yet, but from what I'm seeing so far it would cost more to get a Mac, and in my case they're more than I'm able to spend.
Get the Mac. I've had my Macbook for 2 years now and will never go back to a PC!
Watch out! DH is hating apple b/c they don't like to make things backwards compatible. He as a 4 year old Mac that he can't even connect his iphone to, he has to use our 7 year old Dell desktop to sync his music. He also has another 8 year old Mac that he still uses from time to time because it has software that he can't port to his newer mac because of compatibility issues. It's ridiculous. This is actually the main reason he's switching to PC.
Have a PC. No issues here. Never had a virus either. Worked right out of the box and still no issues 2 years later. And I got to load all my old software on it. IMHO the issues/virus thing is a myth propagated by Apple.
That said, asking "mac or pc?" is like asking "Campy or Shimano?" It's one of those red-button, holy war type questions where everyone has a strong opinion and thinks the other side is nuts.
Last edited by Flur; 08-29-2008 at 01:59 PM.
I just went through the same thing. I narrowed my choices down to a Dell, Lenovo, or Macbook. I had a PC laptop for the past 3 years that was a pain from the moment I opened the box. My computer before that was lovely and I was upset when it fried itself.
The student discount and rebate on the Macs won me over and after my Dad switched to Mac and started raving about it I decided to take the plunge. I'm really glad I did. If you need Windows stuff you can always use bootcamp or parallels. I'm using Office for Mac and really like it, I think it's about $79 installed for a student price. Right now the things I notice the most are it's quiet, it's fast, it doesn't heat up like my other computers did (the one computer I had literally cooked itself), no annoying cd drive that pops open all the time, it's easy to understand what's going on and where everything is, and this totally sounds like an ad but I'll be darned if it really does "just work."
Good luck with finding the right one for you! It's kinda fun getting a new computer and kind of a pain in the bum, too.
Edit: But I also think it's good to keep up with PCs and their technology updates, I'm sure I'll be using a PC once I get a job. It is kind of a Campy/Shimano debate. Is SRAM like Linux then?
Last edited by firenze11; 08-29-2008 at 07:23 PM.
"Live, more than your neighbors. Unleash yourself upon the world and go places. Go now! Giggle. Know. Laugh. And bark the the moon like the wild dog that you are!" - Jon Blais
We have Dell lap tops. heavier than a brick and hard on shoulder.
Like the airbook. MIS guy at my office has one and its really light and he likes it a lot. plugs in a full size monitor, keyboard and wireless mouse and he's a one happy camper.
I just bought ASUS Eee900 book. it weighs in around 2pounds. Fits in my purse its about 9" by about 6" comes with solid state disk powers up really fast. and it has built in WiFI, ethernet, USB ports, SD memory ard reader, web cam. Screen is wide enough so I can pop open a regular document at full size and have to only scroll down to read the whole page.
And its only $530.00. getting a $100 rebate cause I bought it before Aug. 31. try newegg and read other feedback.
Oh you can get it either Linux or XP operating system. I went with Linux. since its faster boot and I get open office, which can read and write microsoft douments, drawings, spread sheets.
so my vote is for mac airbook and asus Eee900 book. Asus also have 2G and 4G model. the screen is slightly smaller but its only $300 to $400.00
smilingcat
So I mentioned a few posts back that my Macbook was having problems. It's two years old and all of a sudden wouldn't boot up. Thankfully, I wasn't in the middle of an important project. Here's how the customer service experience went:
I called Applecare (3-year warranty), and the automated voice tells me I may experience a longer-than-normal wait time. She warns me it's going to be 5 minutes. It turns out to be more like 5 seconds when I get a real person on the line. Within a few minutes, he thinks it's a RAM problem and that I should take it to the service shop.
Service shop tells me it'll be 5-7 working days. I can check the status of my repair online, and right on schedule, today they call to tell me it's ready to be picked up. The whole thing was covered by warranty. I didn't get charged a cent - not for parts, not for labor - my computer is working again, and the best part is I didn't lose any data.
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