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12/1/2007 2:08:39 PM
^^Although if you read the post right before his, the question was in regard to gaming. The response was also intended to apply to gaming. I simply stated that no, you could not get the same potential from a mac as you would a PC in regard to gaming performance. We weren't speaking simply in terms of whether or not it will run windows at full speed. We were speaking in terms of how games would do on mac hardware. So yes my statement was correct. For GAMING a mac can not run windows at the same speed as a pc because of hardware limitations. To simplify things i'll repost the convo.Rat:
12/1/2007 3:46:07 PM
general use typically means email, web browsing, non-intensive spreadsheet work, and word processingdon't even pretend like CAD or rendering (!!!) is general usage. it may be for a very NON general type of person, but that don't make it so GENERALLY speaking[Edited on December 1, 2007 at 7:13 PM. Reason : s]
12/1/2007 7:13:12 PM
^
12/1/2007 9:46:00 PM
basic photo and music work are now general use, too.a very small minority of people use their computers for games that require a top notch graphics cards[Edited on December 1, 2007 at 10:29 PM. Reason : getting a job -> don't give a shit about games]
12/1/2007 10:22:17 PM
Just get one. Ask questions later.
12/1/2007 11:09:42 PM
^^ true too. And even advanced photowork with CS3 and Apeture or whatever is easily handled by Mac natively, virtual Windows on Mac, or Windows natively on a Mac. It should be clear to anyone here that "general use" does not include any intensive 3-D work.
12/2/2007 8:44:35 AM
12/2/2007 9:51:06 PM
but where do i find that simple GUI text editor (i want it bundled with the OS)
12/3/2007 8:32:16 AM
quit bitching and download one
12/3/2007 8:39:24 AM
i don't understand what you mean by "GUI Text editor"TextEdit is included in Applications. It's basically like Windows Wordpad. And of course, there are countless downloadable ones - bbedit, TextMate, TextWrangler, SubEthaEdit, TextForge, etcAnd if you install Developer Tools, that's included with the OS X disc, you will get all the Cocoa developer tools, including interface builders, icon builders, package builders, and of course, editors
12/3/2007 9:09:36 AM
Use Coda
12/3/2007 7:50:20 PM
what's the cheapest apple laptop = $1099 = on sale = $999 (w/ student discount)what's the cheapest PC laptop = $450 = on sale = $300that's all the discussion i need, i'm never gonna game on a laptop anyhow
12/3/2007 7:55:10 PM
^^i use coda for my freelance stuff and now at work. I love it! of course it cost me $70 but its well worth it.Zen Studios is still far better but also more expensive.[Edited on December 3, 2007 at 8:03 PM. Reason : oops typo! good catch dakota took me a second to figure out WTF i was trying to say lol]
12/3/2007 8:01:11 PM
12/3/2007 8:02:15 PM
Textmate is awesome...
12/3/2007 8:05:37 PM
12/3/2007 8:45:50 PM
ZING!
12/3/2007 10:22:28 PM
^^some people just really dislike OS X. It might not work for them, or it might not be compatible with what they're doing. So if they're offered a laptop for 400$+ cheaper, and with an OS they like better, then it's silly to go any other way. Personally i don't mind Leopard, and it's alright for doing a couple things. But it just becomes a hassle when i want to play games, or work on cad, or do anything that won't run in OSX. So maybe it's more the constant reboots that is annoying rather than the actual OS. I'd rather just stick with Vista then try to reboot everytime i want to do anything. I mean if i'm chatting on leopard, or writing a word doc, then decide to finish up a cad drawing or play a game, that involves rebooting into Vista. It's just a big hassle. It's more about what fits the individual need of the person. I've used both macs and pcs my whole life through school and various jobs, and i'm always more productive in Windows. It makes sense to me, and i can organize everything better. Everything just seems slow and sluggish in OSX when i'm trying to get things done. It just boils down to what works better, and what feels better. I don't think you can convince someone either way until they actually use both for an extended period of time.
12/3/2007 10:43:19 PM
12/4/2007 12:08:48 AM
12/4/2007 7:20:46 AM
Those comparisons always take software into account. As if iWorks means a Mac user doesn't need to buy Office.Heck, if sub-par productivity applications are accepted into the debate, then it should be the entire open source suite v. bundled mac iSoftware.Or they try to factor in "cost over the lifetime of the product," as if troubleshooting my PC costs me any money.Or some other stupid tactic that involves something other than a straight up hardware comparison.
12/4/2007 7:52:44 AM
i just picked up a Lenovo:2.2GHz Intel Core 2 Duo / 4MB Cache100GB 7200 RPM HD3GB DDR2 667MHz RAMATI Mobility 1400 128 MB graphics cardWindows XP Profor $800 with a sale including tax and shipping. (bought 1 2GB stick from new egg outside of IBM purchase) + a company discount that stacked with it. Could have got it for cheaper if it wasnt Lenovo but I like their laptops. Besides the graphics card (which should be plenty good enough to play stuff on medium settings i hope - and I have a gaming desktop already anyways) I dont think the lowest apple laptop will be outperforming that at all and i saved a couple hundred bucks.
12/4/2007 8:04:58 AM
12/4/2007 8:24:09 AM
actually, heres a hardware-to-hardware comparison done in June 2007(link to full analysis in this article)http://arstechnica.com/journals/apple.ars/2007/06/08/mac-vs-pc-pricesit says what i've basically been saying: if you start with a Mac, and build up a comparably equipped PC, then they will be nearly the same price - sometimes higher, sometimes lower. But if you start with an ultra cheap PC, there is simply no comparable Apple product
12/4/2007 8:34:37 AM
that price he is quoting the pc laptop is utterly insane considering i almost pulled the trigger on an HP laptop just this week that was easily comparable to the macbook pro they quoted in that article for a lot less. they stated the macbook pro specs were:Glossy 17-in. screen with 1,680-by-1,050-pixel resolution (optional 1,920-by-1,200 resolution for $100 more) 2.4-GHz Core 2 Duo processor 2GB of RAM (upgradeable to 4GB) 256MB Nvidia GeForce 8600M GT video 160GB 5,400-rpm SATA hard drive 8x SuperDrive (DVD+R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW) Gigabit Ethernet port 54Mbit/sec. a/b/g/Draft n Wi-Fi Bluetooth 2.0+EDR, ExpressCard/34 card slot Three USB ports One FireWire 800 port One FireWire 400 port DVI port Built-in iSight video camera One-year warranty (upgradeable to three years)and then said Dell was going to cost them 3500 dollars.$1040 after instant savings from HP this past week got you:Glossy 15.4" screen2.4-GHz Core 2 Duo processor 2GB of RAM (upgradeable to 4GB) 256MB graphics card250 GB 5,400-rpm SATA hard drive HD DVD ROM with SuperMulti DVD+/-R/RW Double LayerGigabit Ethernet port Intel(R) PRO/Wireless 3945ABG Network Connectionnot sure about the USB/firewire ports tho im sure it has a comparable number12 cell li-ion batterythats all i can remember that i can compare.
12/4/2007 9:05:00 AM
12/4/2007 9:25:12 AM
12/4/2007 9:27:48 AM
yea and it runs fine too. friend has one down here and can play CoD 4 on medium settings on a similar laptop as mine...and considering i wont be gaming on this laptop thats more than enough video power for me[Edited on December 4, 2007 at 9:50 AM. Reason : ]
12/4/2007 9:49:07 AM
12/4/2007 10:15:55 AM
12/6/2007 10:06:26 AM
12/6/2007 5:05:12 PM