1/23/2008 6:40:22 PM
apple haters granted not all their products are the best out there. But from the products i've used they certainly are worth the $$$ more so than a competitors product.I'm not a fanboy, i just like a lot of their stuff. You're just bitter like everyone else if they can't A) afford something and they really want it or B) you're on the OMG its not free/linux!Just because you like something doesn't make you a fanboy...not everyone wants a $400 POS laptop running open source shit...[Edited on January 23, 2008 at 6:51 PM. Reason : ...]
1/23/2008 6:49:53 PM
1/24/2008 9:36:41 AM
1/24/2008 10:30:06 AM
this got retarded quickly.
1/24/2008 10:59:11 AM
1/24/2008 11:10:54 AM
i guarantee you if it was $999 we wouldn't be having this discussion about the Macbook Airbut keep in mind this was meant for business & travelers, whom typically don't buy their own laptops.[Edited on January 24, 2008 at 11:17 AM. Reason : .]
1/24/2008 11:14:52 AM
1/24/2008 11:22:13 AM
the problem is you can't put that kind of performance into a small package... getting it that small has it's price. the two major factors I'm sure they were thinking about wasa) heat issues with performance hardware, there's no place for fansb) poor battery life with performance hardwarethey added the SSD as an option because it's really the only peformance related hardware that runs on low-power and produces low-heatin this case i don't think it's possible to have the best of both worlds
1/24/2008 11:29:03 AM
1/24/2008 11:34:45 AM
quagmire02 so what the fuck are you bitching about exactly? The Macbook Air is not for you...move on, who the fuck cares.^incorrect...its people shitting on products that don't even apply to their demographic. Thats trolling.
1/24/2008 12:10:59 PM
its another featherweight laptop, they are typically overpriced and underpowered when compared to other laptops, nothing unusual at all.
1/24/2008 12:51:43 PM
1/24/2008 1:16:29 PM
1/24/2008 1:42:54 PM
1/24/2008 1:47:14 PM
or Sony VAIO TZ150N or Toshiba Portege R500-S5002
1/24/2008 1:57:13 PM
both of those don't have the same sleek design. Also they are thicker. And another thing worth my money is not having to uninstall 1000 pre-installed sony suite software and ad's as soon as i turn on the computer for the first time.not to mention VAIO's suck...perfect example of overpriced junk. If you want to call Apple overpriced, fine. But its not junk. Toshiba on the other hand from past experiences aren't bad.
1/24/2008 2:01:58 PM
^^^ i'm sure it's the damp air in your parents' basement, but you missed the point at each turn...when you start saying that mercedes has the same features as a GM and the only difference is the exterior, i find there's no point arguing with youi've already stated (but perhaps the words were too large for you?) that it's not JUST about design and it's not JUST about features...maybe you consider the engine in your car to be a feature, but in this case:dell: kia body (and price) with a v8 engineapple: mercedes body (and price) with a 4-bangerthat dell will get you were you want to go a hell of a lot faster than the apple, but you won't be as pretty...the apple will get you there after everyone else, but it'll do it in styleif all you want to do is go around the corner to the grocery store to pick up a pint of milk, sure the apple works...heaven forbid you want to go across town or bring much back with you, because the apple falls flat on its face...and you paid more for it[Edited on January 24, 2008 at 2:12 PM. Reason : arrows]
1/24/2008 2:12:35 PM
you're treating it as if the size and weight aren't features at all in themselves.
1/24/2008 2:18:54 PM
^ no, i'm treating it as if they're aren't NEW features...because they're not...there are internet PCs that are already light and small, for far less than the air
1/24/2008 2:23:14 PM
but it's not like there's some laptop out there that has all the features and is as light and small as this for cheaper.
1/24/2008 2:26:15 PM
I'm with quagmire, not really impressed.If these products were cheaper...but they're not. There's really no excuse for spending $2000 on a personal computer in this day and age.
1/24/2008 2:27:17 PM
and there's no point in spending 100,000 on a car. but people do it every day. just because other people have different priorities and price points than you doesn't mean the product is bad.
1/24/2008 2:29:46 PM
1/24/2008 2:35:59 PM
yall just shut the fuck up, everybody gets your point. there is no point to this argumentoh wait, its tww, nvm, continue
1/24/2008 3:01:14 PM
1/24/2008 3:04:29 PM
2/7/2008 12:10:51 PM
Why the hell are people still arguing about this? It's a high priced ultra-light. Get over it. No you shouldn't try to use it to play games. Yes it's disingenuous to compare it to other non-ultralight laptops when criticizing its features. No shit it's overpriced- most apple products are. What more is there to talk about besides how you've let yourselves be trolled for about 3 freaking weeks?[Edited on February 7, 2008 at 12:29 PM. Reason : ]
2/7/2008 12:28:57 PM
hahaha no ones arguing about it...last post made was 1/24. L2R
2/7/2008 12:30:13 PM
^ Obvious troll attempt. The last page is nothing but bickering and whining and mostly from you. Oh I'm so sorry if I included the 1 week hiatus you took before dredging this thread back up though. It's only really two weeks of troll baiting nonsense and a week of lurking.
2/7/2008 12:34:40 PM
umm...i like the macbook air. I'm actually one of those 'dumbasses' who will be getting one eventually. So my only guess is you don't read but instead chose to pull things out of your ass.
2/7/2008 7:28:16 PM
2/8/2008 3:31:21 PM
There's def. a market for these. I'm a "weird" user, because I do like to install multiple operating systems, edit weird stuff, but mostly just surf the web. I'm certainly considering one. Apple fan boy? Hardly, all I have is an Apple laptop, and an iphone. I've never really had another Apple product, I have purchased them for others though.Ahmet -->another person who's IBM/Custom desk/laptops are being replaced by an Apple laptop, for this "non existent market" or "over priced junk".
2/8/2008 4:21:29 PM
^^^^^^^ Wow, that's really funny.Ahmet
2/8/2008 4:22:38 PM
now that the Macbook Air has been in the wild for a couple weeks and people are starting to think rationally about it, it's starting to get a lot more lovehttp://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/858-the-macbook-air-could-easily-be-the-only-machinehttp://daringfireball.net/2008/02/macbook_air_appealhttp://scobleizer.com/2008/02/16/love-for-macbookair-grows/there are a lot of very valid, often overlooked points here. mainly:1) the specs really aren't that bad. Yeah, compared to high end laptops and desktops today, it's not going to win many speed or benchmark contests. But with 2 1.6GHz cores, 80GB hard drive, and 2GB RAM, this thing is still faster than almost any computer just 2-3 years ago, and IIRC, people were still using computers for the same bsic things way back in 2005 - email, browsing, word processing, photos2) the "lack of features" again isn't a big deal to most people. 95% of people don't need a replaceable battery or firewire. Wireless is nearly ubiquitous now, so no ethernet isn't a big deal. And with nearly all software available online now, a DVD drive is often ignored anyway.
2/17/2008 12:05:19 AM
To me, it seems like a complete waste to have such nice dual core processors without any high speed interconnects. You can't rip DVDs, you can't edit videos, you can't use various different audio or video interfaces that use firewire. iMovie is practically useless, which means iDVD is also useless, and no CD ripping makes iTunes partially useless, which is 3/4 of Apples much touted iApps suite.[Edited on February 17, 2008 at 12:16 AM. Reason : ]
2/17/2008 12:15:55 AM
2/17/2008 12:22:33 AM
Reminds me of when Apple started selling computers without a floppy drive and people said it was unacceptable to have a computer without one...Ahmet
2/17/2008 1:24:45 AM
Haha. I remember that. Now what do we do with the 1000's of 3.5" floppies at work?
2/17/2008 1:22:02 PM
2/17/2008 8:04:54 PM
Didn't think this was worth creating a new thread:http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/02/28/2339246Apparently non-apple software suffers decent performance hits compared to similar apple software since apple makes use of numerous undocumented API's. Come on guys! If you want your OS to keep growing it has to be easy for developers to write and port for AND the software has to run as well as it possibly can. Crippling 3rd party software (gross exaggeration) is a terrible move. Hopefully this is just an oversight and they'll release these API's to developers.
2/28/2008 11:49:32 PM
reading a lot of that link tells me this: - Apple doesn't have to document its own software for everyone else if they really don't want to - yes, it's better to document all API's for third party development, IF you want that development to happen - it's not always a good idea to document everything that you development, since there are a few things that aren't going to be stable, safe, etc etcApple isn't "crippling" anything, but they aren't holding anybody's hand to get them caught up with new API's either. One thing that I've hated about developing projects in Unreal is the huge lack of good documentation for the UT2k4 platform as compared to other SDK's. Looking from the other side of the table though, I understand not wanting to provide all that documentation.
2/29/2008 1:14:42 AM
^^ I hope you read the actual article because the Slasdhot blurb is very misleading: http://blog.vlad1.com/2008/02/28/finding-the-os-x-turbo-button/
2/29/2008 2:04:01 AM
yeah, i read ^ last night, and there's a comment on that page from a guy who works on WebKit. the crux of the problem, as I understand it, is that WebKit puts a caps the number of frames per second a WebKit application can draw, either at 30 or 60fps, depending on the situation. Theoretically, i think this is done because human eyes can't process more than that many fps anyway, so if an application is allowed to redraw frames willy-nilly as fast as it wants, there would be no discernible difference to the human eye, but it would require a lot more CPU to keep redrawing. Whether this is true or not, i guess is up for debate. the problem comes in because this artificial limit is not very well documented or explained. There is an Apple technote that says an application can disable this limit by adding a couple lines to the plist configuration file. When the FireFox team added this to FireFox 3, the theoretical benchmark performance increased dramatically, especially in benchmarks that just scroll a webpage up and down really fast. Also, included in the supposedly opensource WebKit is a binary library that cannot be read, and a header file that defined about 100 WB_* functions that are not documented. The FireFox team has found an undocumented function in this file that also disables the redraw/fps limit. So that means if that function had been documented, the FF team could have simply called that function from the beginning and wouldn't have run into this ceiling, instead of altering configuration files. It also means that internal Apple products, like Safari, can call these undocumented APIs to increase their performance over non-Apple products, or it can be used to artificially inflate benchmarks that have access to the API, which may or may not have any effect on real-world performance.
2/29/2008 7:23:12 AM
^^ Yeah I did read it- and I admitted to exaggerating a bit. I guess my point was that when you're a distant second in desktop+laptop OS share you can't be making it harder for people to write software for your OS. That even goes for your competitors. Sure they didn't cripple firefox, but Apple should be encouraging people to write programs for their OS and make them as stable and fast as possible. One of OSX's biggest selling points for me has been how much faster SOME of the programs I use run in it. Maple, for some bizzarre reason, seems to run much faster in OSX than it does in XP (1.86ghz macbook with 1gb of ram vs. inspiron e1505 with 2.16 ghz core 2 duo w/2gb of RAM + some irrellevent things like video card etc.) Anyways, if Apple wants to grow their market share it doesn't help them to artificially make their suites of software slightly faster than products people are used to and won't switch from.
2/29/2008 7:49:42 AM
the original post was updated after the slashdotting
2/29/2008 8:32:56 AM
Didn't Microsoft get sued regarding something like this?
2/29/2008 8:49:58 AM
Nah, this looks like more of an oversight and sloppyness on apple's part than maliciousness. Microsoft's suits have dealt with deliberate anti-competitive behavior while this seems to be more of an honest kind of fuck up.[Edited on February 29, 2008 at 8:52 AM. Reason : ]
2/29/2008 8:51:58 AM
2/29/2008 9:35:04 AM
it really depends on what their intention was. It's clear that all software companies and projects have and must have internal APIs that are not available to the public, for any number of reasons. Any maliciousness would come in if they use the internal API to artificially slow down external apps or artificially speed up internal apps. For example, say there is private internal API function that disables an artificial graphics performance ceiling, similar to the one the FF guys found. The ceiling put in place limits the frames per second sent to the screen, with the intent that humans can only process a certain number of frames per second anyway, so anything above a number (like 60) is simply wasted processor time. So the limit is in place to free up CPU time for other processing tasks and theoretically there should be no impact on the user because he wouldn't be able to tell the difference between 60fps and 150fps anyway. Some maliciousness could come in if Apple secretively disabled the limiter when they do benchmarks for their own programs, like Safari. So one of the benchmarks is somehow related to the fps the program generates. If Safari disables the ceiling, they can really crank up the framerate and blow the top off the benchmark, but if another prgram like FireFox is not allowed to disable the ceiling, their benchmarks will be limited by a relatively undocumented feature.in this particular case, i think the framerate-drawing limit is not supposed to have an effect on real-world performance and would mostly show up in benchmark and automated testing performance, but the FF guys says disabling it does have a real-world impact. Also, even though disabling this feature is available in an internal API, Apple also gives a way to disable it in the application configuration plist, so if they give a reasonable workaround, i'm not sure there is much room to complain about it being hidden or non-accessible.
2/29/2008 9:37:28 AM