How many Core 2 Duos did Dell actually ship on launch? Apple didn't want to do a "dry release" (ala PS3) of Core 2 Duo machines, so they waited until they had adequate supplies to launch their products properly. The other PC manufacturers all did a dry launch and said "we've got Core 2 Duo right now" and most people had to wait weeks/months to actually get their hardware. Which approach do you think is better?subterFUSE wrote:muscleandhate wrote:It's more than the look of the laptop, it's the feel of it and the design. Every time I use a Mac or Mac Pro it just oozes quality, it's actually fun to use. Apple hardware is light years beyond Dell or anything else.subterFUSE wrote:Macs and PCs used to be different in terms of hardware.
Macs used PowerPC CPU chips, while PCs used Intel or AMD chips.
Now Macs use Intel, and the result is that there is no hardware difference between a Mac and a PC, other than minor cosmetics of the case.
A Mac is simply a PC that they allow to run OSX.
A PC could run OSX, but Apple doesn't want to allow that because it would kill their hardware sales.... turning Apple into a pure software company like Microsoft.
Apple is actually behind Dell, in terms of the actual hardware inside. Example: Dell released Core 2 Duo laptops months before Apple had them.
In my course (Computer Science/Engineering), almost everyone I know are switching or already have switched to Mac. These are the people who study computers, both the hardware and the software. The experts are mostly using macs (or are about to switch) - what more do you need to know?
(That's not entirely true, some of the hardcore ideoligists in universities won't choose to use anything other then Linux!)
I have told my friends that use PCs that every time they call me for computer support I will give them shit for 5 minutes for not buying a mac before I help them. They still call me quite regularly even still.....
Maybe tech people evangelise macs because they are f$%#ng sick of helping their PC using friends.
GAFM ***