Freelancers Network
 
skill list top cap
Homepage
Join the Freelancer's Network
Update your details
Find a freelancer
Post a project
Find a project
Projects Archive
Post a job
Find a job
Jobs Archive
See Dan's Pages
See Andy's Pages
Link to this site
Resources
Join/Leave Forum
Forum Messages
+Additions+ Adverts
Advertising
Contact Us
Subscribe to our newsletter - enter your email address and hit return
Freelancers.net is owned and operated by Andy Stowell and Dan Winchester
skill list end cap
guru web hostcom

Find me again on Freelancers.net

Re: FN-FORUM: Mac vs Linux advice?

date posted 11th January 2005 21:40

On 11 Jan 2005 18:52:08 -0000, Joe Freeman [EMAIL REMOVED] wrote:
>
> So, have any of you switched from Linux to Mac? Can you list some bad
> points of Mac's?

Oh, lots of them!

Price - "you can always get it cheaper" with the PC platform. You have
choice - tons of it. In fact - from a Mac user's point of view, the
choices are bewildering. If that's the sort of computing environment
you enjoy and get a kick out of making all those hardware decisions -
don't buy a Mac. You'll be frustrated. On the other hand - all that
choice can bring its own set of problems - as many posts I have seen
on here attest. "Why doesn't x work with y when I have z installed?"

Cost of service. Again - PC parts are 'cheap as chips', readily
obtainable anywhere. Whereas if the Super Drive (CD-RW/DVD-R) dies on
a Mac and you're out of warranty - prepare to have your wallet
vacuumed. However, you can buy 3 years of AppleCare which removes the
uncertainty - at a price.

Choice of software. There's three gazillion applications available for
Windows however, you're talking Linux ...

does Linux have 23,000 applications? Strikes me its very much a
roll-your-own environment. Which I have to say appeals to me in many
respects but I've too much invested in the Mac platform ... however if
Linux had been around back in 1985 ... hmmm.

Most importantly - does the Mac platform have what you're looking for?
See http://guide.apple.com/

Choice of 3rd party hardware. Since Apple adopted USB, dropped SCSI,
introduced FireWire, this has improved. Vendors used to have to
maintain two separate product lines - one for the PC and the other for
the Mac. Of course, most didn't bother. The Mac world developed its
own base of hardware manufacturers and OEMs. These days, many of those
businesses have expanded into the PC marketplace which makes it much
harder to justify charging Mac users a premium for the same device.

On the other hand ... George has got me convinced ... :)

The prejudice some supporters of the PC platform hold towards the Mac
is based on history. The old Mac was based extensively on proprietary
technology. We had ADB keyboards, a network protocol called AppleTalk,
no parallel port, non standard serial ports, the slot architecture for
many years was Nubus, we used SCSI instead of IDE, the floppy drive
couldn't handle PC disks for the first few years and connecting Macs
to PCs was a dark art. Let's not forget video interfaces. Much of this
technology eas developed by Apple and some of it was indisputedly
superior. Nubus gave us 'plug and play' a decade before its emergence
on the PC, AppleTalk may have been s-l-o-w but in terms of user
friendliness - night and day. However, there was also a culture of
'not invented here' - they even developed their own modem for gawd's
sake!

Now we have a Unix based OS, USB 2.0, ATA drives, ATAPI peripherals,
we use the VGA standard. FireWire has been made available to the PC
world under license - the old Apple would never have done that,
perceiving any new technology it developed to be part of its
competitive advantage and to be guarded at all costs.

Rant over ... Food ...

Dave
--
http://www.m4mac.com
Help, Troubleshooting, Coaching for Mac Users
07958 773472



Messages by Day
January 31st 2005
January 30th 2005
January 29th 2005
January 28th 2005
January 27th 2005
January 26th 2005
January 25th 2005
January 24th 2005
January 23rd 2005
January 22nd 2005
January 21st 2005
January 20th 2005
January 19th 2005
January 18th 2005
January 17th 2005
January 16th 2005
January 15th 2005
January 14th 2005
January 13th 2005
January 12th 2005
January 11th 2005
January 10th 2005
January 9th 2005
January 8th 2005
January 7th 2005
January 6th 2005
January 5th 2005
January 4th 2005
January 3rd 2005
January 2nd 2005
January 1st 2005


Messages by Month
December 2005
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005


Messages by Year
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000