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A nice apple story
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iBoaterer[_2_]
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Sep 2011
Posts: 7,588
A nice apple story
In article ,
says...
On 11/18/11 3:42 PM,
wrote:
On Fri, 18 Nov 2011 13:27:31 -0600, Boating All Out
wrote:
In , dump-on-
says...
On 11/18/11 12:37 PM,
wrote:
On Fri, 18 Nov 2011 06:21:22 -0500, X ` Man
wrote:
My iMac has a 27" screen, an intel i7 processor, 16 gigabytes of RAM, a
one terabyte hard drive and is "served" by an 8 terabyte Synology
server. Gee, I wonder what apps significant to me I can't run on this
mac and if it is only available under a MS OS, under Windows 7 under
VMware?
For most users, the hardware platform no longer is relevant.
But you don't want to swap a hard drive.
I don't need to...Apple does it for me.
Like I said, for people who don't want to know they have a computer.
Absurd.
No, but maybe behind the times.
It used to be that Apple was like taking a taxi everywhere, and Windows
was basically driving and maintaining your own car.
In terms of the OS, since Windows 7, and to some extent XP, that's
changed.
I've never had to tinker with Windows 7 - not a bit.
I don't know anything about Apple hardware.
I do know that with my Windows systems I can pick and choose among many
vendors to change hardware parts, and improve or fix anything myself
without relying on one vendor.
Pretty much like I can select the type of oil and filters for my car.
Or soup it up.
It's an "ownership" thing.
Saying "I don't need to...Apple does it for me." is no different than
saying "Call a cab, I got no car keys."
I look at it as Windoze lets you do things that Bill Gates did not
think you would ever want to and Apple simply tells you what Steve
Jobs allows you to do.
If I am willing to look around a little I can find a driver for just
about any kind of obscure hardware and the world is flush with windows
software.
I do like playing with the hardware tho.
I can understand people who just want to cut open the box and start
using their machine but you pay in spades for that and you plod along
a pretty narrow path. If that is where you want to go, it is good for
you.
You're a computer hobbyist. I am not. I earn my living as a writer with
my apple computers. I expect them to work and allow me to use my word
processors, printers, web clients, email clients, fax, whatever, without
any serious glitches. If my desktop apple craps out on me (as it did the
other day when the hard drive failed), I expect to be able to turn on my
backup macbook pro and continue where I left off. I can do this because
I back up work files fairly continuously, even as I work on them.
I have no reason to futz around with obscure hardware. If I want to do
that, I'll take apart and clean a fishing reel.
Fax? In 2011???
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