Anyone else have good success at migrating from Windows to OSX? I hate that I still have to depend on Parallels for a lot of things, but overall, my computing experience has improved a LOT.I love QuickSilver.
8/12/2007 11:52:21 PM
big deal. since you last posted everybody on tww has also switched.
8/12/2007 11:57:49 PM
no one cares. Why do you hate that you have a great virtual machine? But yes, as soon as they work out the heat issues, I will be an instant MacBook convert.
8/12/2007 11:58:52 PM
No heat issues here, but then I am on a macbook. The MBPs are kinda big, and I already have a 17inch Inspiron. BTW, LMAO, did that many TWWers really convert? The thing that made me jump fence was Safari for Windows, although it was an immediate failure.
8/13/2007 12:02:12 AM
yeah, it's true. i'm using like 8 macs right now
8/13/2007 12:04:47 AM
8/13/2007 12:05:41 AM
^among about 20 other industries with PC specific applications
8/13/2007 12:06:34 AM
well, for the most part industry adoption is governed by installbase/corporate support. Apple doesn't like selling to enterprises. Steve Jobs has this big thing about selling directly to the end user.But now that Vista has been an utter failure (forced installs on new hardware notwithstanding), a lot of people are moving to Macs, especially since hardware is cheaper in most cases. I did some app development on my mac with Objective C, and all this Next Step stuff is AWESOME. Can't wait for garbage collection in Leopard, although it's still implemented in a way in Tiger.
8/13/2007 12:09:59 AM
got a macbook in march. was nervous about getting it as it would be my first mac, but I just heard too many good things from close friends and family to not give it a try.proprietary stuff can be a little pricer, but you get what you pay for, and I'm very happy with it.
8/13/2007 12:14:20 AM
yea, Vista is a pretty much unequivical (sp) failure. It's a shame Apple doesn't jump in the gap and release OSX as a standalone
8/13/2007 12:14:39 AM
8/13/2007 12:18:45 AM
8/13/2007 12:31:32 AM
8/13/2007 12:34:13 AM
8/13/2007 12:36:25 AM
Well, duh, of course the OS upgrades bring in the highest profit margin, but that's not their core product, at least any more. No one would buy the upgrade if they hadn't invested in a Mac in the first place. By selling OSX in the open market, they forego the strict hardware requirements they have in place, and also lose control of where and how the end users use OSX. It loses its niche, and tie that together with Apple's mantra of selling only to the end-user, and you have a disaster. Plus, I don't think your argument for selling OSX stands any more simply because I can buy a top of the line macbook for cheaper/same price as a Windows laptop. If someone is on the edge, price isn't keeping them down...and I am not sure how releasing OSX in the open would help Apple sales other than marginally.About the hardware stuff, Apple does support a lot of devices, through their own drivers, but that's got nothing to do with them preparing for an OEM launch or anything.
8/13/2007 12:45:46 AM
So why did an inferior version of Safari cause you to make the jump?
8/13/2007 12:50:21 AM
Font rendering.Also, I was floored by the incremental search...it just looked sexy.
8/13/2007 12:51:01 AM
Bull. A baseline PC laptop costs 400 dollars. A baseline PC costs 400 dollars. A baseline Mac Laptop is still 1000, a baseline desktop is still ~1000 with the Mini.And I'm not talking about device support, im talking hardware support. OSX supports virtually all ATI, nVidia, Intel and AMD hardware. It supports most odm audio hardware, odm ethernet hardware and a whole bunch of other component level support.It would allow Apple to grow into another huge market. They can best Microsoft at it's own core product, with far fewer resources and far less risk. Most of the US OEM's would quickly adopt OSX in their lines should it become available, which would turn Apple's competition into their customers. Not only that, it would only INCREASE the penetration for their own hardware configurations which ARE finally price competitive with white-box pc's. You make the software platform ubiquitous and it gives people that much more incentive to pair your OSX with an apple machine versus another manufacturer
8/13/2007 12:52:16 AM
8/13/2007 12:57:40 AM
8/13/2007 1:53:35 AM
I don't know...when I was buying my laptop, I tried to configure a few Dells, but all of them ended up more expensive after optimizing the display or the processor.
8/13/2007 1:57:49 AM
Exactly, you want all kinds of addons and features.The average consumer just wants a cheap laptop that works. They dont care about draft N, bluetooth or any of the other mess. They do care about the price tag.And Michael Dell has said numerous times in the past that Dell would instantly offer OSX on their systems, should it become available. You can't get much more reliable than it coming straight from the man himself.OEM's will do almost anything to get out of the death grip of Microsoft licensing. And OSX could easily undercut Windows licensing while still being Apple's highest margin product by far.
8/13/2007 2:32:16 AM
8/13/2007 3:09:06 AM
I enjoy my Powerbook that I bought a few years ago. I don't own an iPod or anything Apple except for the laptop. It's pretty cool, and QuickSilver is totally FTMFW.Now that the virtualization is pretty good (VirtualPC on a PPC works, but sucks), I may spring for an iMac or something along those lines the next time I plan on buying a new desktop, probably in a few years.
8/13/2007 7:13:42 AM
I'll run a MacOS when I can easily dualboot on the windows box I already have. I would never be able to use it all the time, but I think it would be fun to play with now and again.
8/13/2007 7:51:58 AM
8/13/2007 8:11:01 AM
this thread seems set up for a neodata outburst.
8/13/2007 9:05:41 AM
8/13/2007 9:46:51 AM
PS: Holla at me if anyone wants a mySkitch invite.http://www.myskitch.com/
8/13/2007 9:51:49 AM
If you like Quicksilver then check out Launchy or Colibri for Windows.http://www.launchy.net/http://colibri.leetspeak.org/
8/13/2007 1:29:53 PM
Yea Parallels Coherence mode makes it invaluable. And it has hardware 3d support now. That pretty much sold me on the software end of buying a Mac.
8/13/2007 3:30:19 PM
^^^ Skitch is a beautiful thing... been using it for ~month? now and i doubt i'd ever stop.
8/13/2007 4:42:12 PM
coherence is nice for some of the apps i use that don't run on os xi try to get them to run in Darwine first, because i like things running natively.gg esgargs.
8/13/2007 4:43:57 PM
Pretty sure my next desktop is going to be an iMac[Edited on August 13, 2007 at 6:33 PM. Reason : 24"]
8/13/2007 6:33:25 PM
lame. I've been a mac owner since like 97, G. my first PC was my work laptop. i still don't own a PC. never will.
8/13/2007 6:41:16 PM
do you want a cookie?
8/13/2007 7:47:43 PM
Macs were shit until OSX.
8/13/2007 10:10:30 PM
8/13/2007 10:40:11 PM
^ You're an idiot.Macs have little to no downside now. Even if you think they suck, you still get a killer piece of hardware with awesome design that you can run windows on.
8/14/2007 8:00:09 AM
8/14/2007 9:22:09 AM
8/14/2007 9:24:50 AM
Yeah, base-configured macbooks (like mine that ran 889 at the bookstore) are great for everything except 3D design programs and games. Not sure I'd want to run maple on mine without another gig of RAM. I think I'll keep using my PC laptop for that.
8/14/2007 9:26:28 AM
Oh yeah...I upgraded my RAM to 2GB the next day, and also put in a 250GB hard drive.Thinking of upgrading it to 3GB as I have heard that that's the max the macbook would support.
8/14/2007 9:29:43 AM
8/14/2007 9:41:47 AM
I think he's saying that even if you don't like OSX, you still get a wonderful piece of hardware that can run Windows.Hardware without software has no function, just form.
8/14/2007 9:42:53 AM
barely on topic...but i played with an iphone the other day and was immediately filled with tech-lust. don't think its worth $500-$600 without GPS and 3G, but i still want one
8/14/2007 10:14:25 AM
8/14/2007 10:18:30 AM
just wondering...how good do those integrated GPS receivers work inside buildings/cars?I thought about the lack of 3G for a while, but then realized that it was a moot point for a while, at least for ATT customers. The ATT 3G network isn't substantially faster than EDGE at present, at least in the triangle region. And then, I don't use EDGE a lot as is, simply because I get a Wifi signal at most places. When I am driving, I am just checking my email or looking up directions, so it really doesn't matter whether the connection is 400kbps or 250 kbps.
8/14/2007 10:19:44 AM
8/14/2007 10:21:45 AM
how does these networks compare to the evdo network, if they are comparable?
8/14/2007 10:21:52 AM