Home Forums Chat Forum Apple Mac…. Are they worth it???

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  • Apple Mac…. Are they worth it???
  • nickc
    Full Member

    I'm typing this on a G5 powermac from http://www.scrumpymacs.co.uk – I think it's from mid 2006, running 10.4.11. with 1Gb ram.

    sweeping generalization alert…Every MAC owner seems to know these sorts of things about their computer, random pointless bits of facts. This is reason enough for me never to get one….

    higgo
    Free Member

    The OS on macs used to be a strong point too in comparision to windows in terms of stability, speed and user friendliness – but i dont think there is much (if any) difference now.

    There is a difference – Windows has now caught and passed Mac OS.

    porterclough
    Free Member

    Windows has now caught and passed Mac OS.

    Having had to use DOS (sorry, err, Command Prompt, whatever) to diagnose why my son's Windows 7 computer wouldn't connect to the internet (it had helpfully remembered an incorrect DNS address) on the home wifi, I beg to differ…

    geoffj
    Full Member

    IME more folk who properly know about computers, given a choice and the money, would buy a mac than a PC.

    geoffj
    Full Member

    sweeping generalization alert…Every MAC Mac owner seems to know these sorts of things about their computer, random pointless bits of facts. This is reason enough for me never to get one….

    Hardly pointless or random. Do you not know how many doors your car has or how big the engine is? Or what flavour of transmission you have on your bike(s)?

    woffle
    Free Member

    IME more folk who properly know about computers, given a choice and the money, would buy a mac than a PC

    +1. Out of about 25 IT staff at work I think there are 3 without Macs, one is a Linux freak and the others are our Windows administrators.

    clubber
    Free Member

    Funny my experience of IT staff is exactly the opposite.

    woffle
    Free Member

    Funny my experience of IT staff is exactly the opposite.

    Seems to be the way with all these 'discussions'. Person a. has used x faultlessly for years and is a huge fan. Person b. has had nothing but trouble and will spend equal amounts of time cussing x to high heaven.

    You pays your money, you takes your choice.

    EDIT: (and when I say IT staff I'm talking systems administrators / networking bods / decent programmers rather than PC World type 'IT Staff' 🙂 )

    repatriot
    Free Member

    Thing is I bought a Mac 8 years ago as they where different and looked more reliable etc. Now it is a different situation, Iphone seem to be taking over the world and mac technology seems to be every where I find my self unable to deal with none mac computers but not liking there dominance!

    M6TTF
    Free Member

    Depends what you want to use it for. If it's just for a bit of browsing, email and word/excel etc then probably not – but if you can afford it then why not. I've used macs for 20 years and can count the number of problems I've had on one hand. But I know people who have been unlucky. I'd recommend a new iMac in a heartbeat, my 27" one is great

    clubber
    Free Member

    Woffle – so am I 🙂 proper IT professionals.

    missingfrontallobe
    Free Member

    Apple advice re anti virus software[/url]

    deadlydarcy – Member
    Yes, if only for longevity and not having to worry (as much!!!) about all the viruses, malware etc out there. No excuse for leaving yourself unprotected though

    Well, Apple are now advising users to get anti-virus software

    MrSmith
    Free Member

    people on here seem quite happy to spend over the odds on boutique frames so why the problem with people who buy boutique computers?

    clubber
    Free Member

    Er… The op asked if it was worth paying the extra….

    Kuco
    Full Member

    Well I had a call today from the repairers they reckon my graphics chip may have cooked it self on my MacBook Pro 😥
    It's not even under warranty so might end up buying a cheap windows machine to replace it.

    SprocketJockey
    Free Member

    I work with PCs and Windows all day, so use a Macbook Pro at home. Mainly because I just want to use the bloody thing for what I need to do and not have to bother about updating virus software, chasing bugs and it crashing all the time (and yes I know that Apple are now recommending anti virus)….don't get me started on Vista…In my opinion Macs are well worth the extra money for the lack of faff… just plug it in and off you go. The aluminium macbook is also a thing of beauty.

    Think of it like a Ti Singlespeed… not neccessarily suitable for every situation, but built to last, works when you want it to, nice to use and look at, reliable etc.

    Kuco
    Full Member

    Well mine **** wasn't SprocketJokey

    clubber
    Free Member

    Think of it like a Ti Singlespeed… not neccessarily suitable for every situation, but built to last, works when you want it to, nice to use and look at, reliable etc.

    sort of though I don't think that they are inherently more reliable.

    But that's why I would suggest that someone like OP who just want it for basics sticks with a cheap PC (running Windows 7, not that I ever have any issues on my other, XP machines). Just like you'd suggest a new mtber didn't start out with a bling SS…

    SprocketJockey
    Free Member

    kuco…unlucky. Have never had a problem with mine, whereas I've had problems with every windows machine I've owned.

    It's called an opinion. The OP may well be better off with a cheap windows PC, but as someone who spends a lot of time fixing other people's PC problems, I prefer not to have to do it in my own time.

    clubber
    Free Member

    While I'm honestly trying to think of the last problem I had on either of my XP computers (and my Win 7 one but that's only been a few months though no issues).

    SprocketJockey
    Free Member

    clubber – the fact that you have 3 PCs at home probably suggests that you would consider what I would regard as faff, as a leisure activity 😀

    epicsteve
    Free Member

    Funny my experience of IT staff is exactly the opposite.

    Our office (we're an IT consultancy specialising in Oracle) is about 25% Macs (for home use that is – no-one uses them at work).

    I've had them in the past but we've only got one now and that doesn't get used much (we've several Linux servers at home as well, so aren't totally a Windows shop). The kids and wife use Macs at school but prefer Windows PC's at home, and I do some gaming so Macs aren't a great option. Mac laptops also look very pricey compared to Windows ones at the moment.

    buzz-lightyear
    Free Member

    Yes, they are worth it. But it's hard to explain why.

    The remark about "architecture" comes close.

    buzz-lightyear
    Free Member

    A few random things:

    The OS memory footprint is small, vs Vista/7 which has a large footprint. So it loads fast and you dont need so much RAM to run apps.
    The OS is Unix – let me assure you that this is a good thing.
    Because the hardware and OS are designed as an integrated system, there are no driver version or performance problems – zip (except with some non-apple peripherals).
    Apple software generally is better designed and developed IMO, compared with the quality of MS equivalents I am forced to use on PCs.
    Serious thought has gone into physical design to make them lifestyle objects, not merely computing boxes.

    My next computer will be an Apple.

    woffle
    Free Member

    Mac laptops also look very pricey compared to Windows ones at the moment.

    True. But then my macbook is 3 years old, was £700 odd new and I'd still get £250 odd for it now. My powerbook G4 is coming on 7 years old and it'd fetch £300 odd. My old IBM Thinkpad cost more than the macbook and was worth the best part of ****-all after 2 years. It's sometime we considered when buying ours – it does make a difference when it comes to 'upgrading' (should you feel the need, not that I do, obviously 🙂 )

    I've got Oracle installed on my Mac mini as a dev server for when I'm working from home. Also have a couple of databases on Solaris and Linux respectively via Parallels for testing – means I don't have to have 3 or 4 plastic boxes in the house…

    Eccles
    Free Member

    OP: Yep.

    Have used both.

    A PC can be like my MTB – years of messing about to get it just so, upgrades, changes, built from scratch, perfect for what I use it for, less good at other things that I didn't build it for, occasionally breaks wholly inexplicably, fairly ugly and crude but damn effective. My road bike, on the other hand, has had a saddle and seatpost change and is stock otherwise and is a damn site prettier and hasn't even snapped a spoke, that's like a Mac – It's a Colnago.

    Meh.

    Eccles
    Free Member

    Damn, read "sight". Sorry.

    clubber
    Free Member

    SprocketJockey – Member
    clubber – the fact that you have 3 PCs at home probably suggests that you would consider what I would regard as faff, as a leisure activity

    God no! I'm no computer geek, I just like stuff that works reliably. I have zero interest in playing with computers for the sake of it (unlike bikes…)

    1 xp desktop bought in 2005 that is now used as a basic, stripped down media centre

    2 xp media centre computer used for exactly that in a different room to 1

    3 W7 laptop bought when my wife lost her job and work laptop which she preferred to a desktop so we replaced it.

    samuri
    Free Member

    Funny my experience of IT staff is exactly the opposite.

    Our office (we're an IT consultancy specialising in Oracle) is about 25% Macs (for home use that is – no-one uses them at work).

    Uhuh. I'm an IT security consultant and I'd say the split is fairly clear from my experiences for those who I work with. Those guys that have no actual hands on experience of implementing IT systems and who tend to work with high level designs will go out and buy a MAC. Those guys that do all the proper integration and installation and balls out coding will buy a high end laptop and immediately set it up to dual boot windows and their preferred linux. I do know exceptions to this but they're generally few and far between.

    Jamie
    Free Member

    Incidentally my MBP makes cracking toast and once told me it loved me.

    Worth every penny.

    vrapan
    Free Member

    I work with Windows based machines 7 1/2 hours a day. I have three macs at home and not planning on changing any time soon 🙂

    Buy one I doubt you will regret it.

    grievoustim
    Free Member

    I've had them in the past but we've only got one now and that doesn't get used much (we've several Linux servers at home as well, so aren't totally a Windows shop).

    honestly, what for? Why would a person need several servers at home? I'm not being rude – I'm just curious why anyone would need to have multiple servers at home. I'm not evan sure why you would need one TBH but I'm not a techy type

    Jamie
    Free Member

    Oh, incidentally Mac fans its Macheist time again. £175 worth of mac apps for £13.

    http://www.macheist.com/

    woffle
    Free Member

    …those guys that have no actual hands on experience of implementing IT systems and who tend to work with high level designs will go out and buy a MAC. Those guys that do all the proper integration and installation and balls out coding will buy a high end laptop and immediately set it up to dual boot windows and their preferred linux.

    FWIW – I spend my working day coding on an iMac or older Powermac G4 building software for a trading house…

    Can't say I think much of the Macheist this time round either.

    epicsteve
    Free Member

    honestly, what for? Why would a person need several servers at home? I'm not being rude – I'm just curious why anyone would need to have multiple servers at home. I'm not evan sure why you would need one TBH but I'm not a techy type

    All sorts of things! I used to be a technical type who's long since moved into management and I use the servers at home to try out new products and versions and to help keep my technical skills up-to-date. The sorts of systems I work on don't work well in VM's on a single processor/single-disk PC or laptop so having multi-processor servers with plenty of disks is useful. I've even got things like SUN and Dell SCSI disk arrays and DLT tape drives at home…

    I keep meaning to use one of the servers as a media server for the house but haven't got round to it yet.

    epicsteve
    Free Member

    But then my macbook is 3 years old, was £700 odd new and I'd still get £250 odd for it now

    The other way to look at it is that it's probably already lost more in value than an equivalent Windows laptop would have cost.

    woffle
    Free Member

    The other way to look at it is that it's probably already lost more in value than an equivalent Windows laptop would have cost.

    True, to a point. But then we have a pile of Thinkpads, Vaios and odd Dell laptops in the comms room at work – all under 3 years old, the majority costing more than my macbook did new. And all broken or no longer able to cope as backup trading machines for home use…

    Going back to the OP – for pretty much browsing only then yes, I'd say get a cheap pc notebook for under £500…

    epicsteve
    Free Member

    Those guys that have no actual hands on experience of implementing IT systems and who tend to work with high level designs will go out and buy a MAC. Those guys that do all the proper integration and installation and balls out coding will buy a high end laptop and immediately set it up to dual boot windows and their preferred linux.

    In our place it's mainly the accountants and sales guys who're Mac users. The tech folks use PC's (although a couple have Macs at home) but no-one dual boots Linux as everyone that needs/wants it has access to hosted Linux servers.

    attractivefish
    Free Member

    I've got a Macbook pro, which i was glad of when a numpty pulled out on me while commuting home, ran into the rear quarter, wrecked my front wheel and rc31 c type forks, went over the back of the car, and landed on my side, yep the macbook was in the bag which took a bit of a whack, warped the rear left corner of the base and that was it, I'd like to see any plastic laptop take that kind of impact.
    Wouldn't change my macbook pro for the world, well maybe a vanilla 😀

    beamers
    Full Member

    Here's my take on Mac OS v Windows 7

    I switched my new iMac on, it connected to my home network straight away with no fiddling required.

    My office buddy installed Windows 7 on his home PC and the next day spent a good half hour on the phone talking his wife through the uber complex steps to change settings in order to get their computer connected to the internet again.

    Cue smug Mac user look from across the office.

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