I really want to let this thread go, but you Mac fanboys keep spreading these horrible lies.
OMFG I'm a "Mac fanboy" now? Whatever!
I ran Windows for years. I
still run windows and there are
still things I like better in Windows. I just prefer Mac for my own personal use at home because of less BS, like plugging and unplugging USB devices causing trouble and crashes all the time. Why the fawk can't MS get that right?
Adobe PDF writer? Fine. But honestly, how many people need that?
I consider it essential and have used it for years. The fact that Apple gives it to you as part of the OS saves me money period.
And for what it's worth, MS Word will save your document as a PDF.
Does Word come bundled with Windows? No. Talk about irrelevant arguments...
Built-in color calibration? PCs have that too, it's just not called Color Calibration.
You're right, it's not called that because it's
NOT "calibration". They have some odd color management system but it won't calibrate your screen like Mac will.
Besides, software calibration isn't the way to go for photography.
Really? Seems to work perfectly fine on both my Mac
and my old PC screen which I run at the same time. Windows gave me no built-in tools whatsoever to calibrate the screen with. Woulda had to go out and buy a colorvision spyder or something.
I'm not even going to touch the virus/spam software, because I already have in this thread.
Don't need it on Mac, at least not yet. And I think if you're running a Windows PC and are not running AV software you're nuts, especially if you're hooked up on a network. I've had network borne viruses hose up my wife's laptop and she didn't even have to click on anything to get infected.
I'm sure the iMac screens are fine, but I HATE HATE HATE glossy screens. The only thing they're good for is watching movies in dark rooms.
Nonsense. They're great for photography and give you nice rich colors and deep blacks unlike non glossy screens. Yeah they have more glare, but that's easy to deal with.
And also, "PC screens" are also used on Macs, so again completely invalid argument.
DUH, I use one on my iMac too from my old PC, and unlike Windows, Mac actually has the built-in tools to calibrate it so that photos look the way they're supposed to on that one too.
Lastly, since I switched to Mac:
- the amount of swearing at the computer has gone down to virtually zero which is drastic, because I used to swear at my PCs a lot. My wife will back me up on that
- have never had even a single system crash vs lots of BSODs on Windows. Heck, I don't even know what a system crash looks like on Mac!
- when an application hangs in Mac it
never takes the whole system down with it. The Windows 9x kernel was horrible with that. NT/2k/XP were better, but the whole system would still go down from time to time.
- when an application hangs in Mac, hitting Quit or Force Quit in the equivalent of the task manager most certainly will get rid of it. NT was pretty good about this, but things go a lot worse from 2k onwards.
- already noted, but I get consistent USB attach/detach operation in Mac vs non-stop attach or detach issues in Windows all the freakin time. Plugging and unplugging a digital camera, external HD, or USB memory key multiple times per day quickly drove me to the edge. I still remember the Comdex video of Bill Gates demonstrating Windows 9x's great new USB support and then the thing BSODed on him right at the convention! :lmao: They still don't have it right.
- due to the fact that Apple builds all the hardware and software, they have much tighter control over what goes into their systems and know exactly what all of their configurations are, and thus can have far better quality control, which gives you a ton less crashing and better system reliability all by itself. The openness of the PC platform has its benefits (custom system building, insanely fast processing and graphics in very cheap packages), but all of the variability makes things more crash prone and less reliable.
- I have yet to have an issue with an Apple going to sleep or coming out of sleep mode, vs issues all the time on Windows. In fact power management in the BIOS is one of the very first things I would always disable because it
always caused problems, and never seemed to work correctly on my laptops
- In Apple you never have 3 different applications all trying to control the same thing and all conflicting with each other all at the same time like you can have on Windows. I
dare not touch anything in the network configuration on my wife's laptop, because there's the Cisco tools that need to run, the built-in IBM tools that need to control something else, and then the built-in Windows stuff controlling another part. The last time some idiot tried to "improve" something on her laptop, it took me
three days worth of spare time to get it working again. Pure nonesense. Admittedly, half of this is poor OEM setup, but then again they needed to add in the extra stuff because the built-in windows tools weren't good enough in the first place.
- a lot more but I'm just too lazy and don't care enough to bother typing anymore. Mac just plain works for me better, requires less upkeep, I get more work done, with less aggravation, and I like it better.
But yup! It's all lies I tell ya! LIES!!! :lmao::hail:
I still use both Mac and Windows DAILY. Windows at work, and Mac
and Windows at home. Fanboy for sure.
I'm done.
