Talya wrote:
Taskiss wrote:
You do know that you can boot Windows on a Mac don't you?
Then you're not only paying the 50% premium to get the same hardware you'll get in a good PC, but you're also paying for OSX and not using it (since you have to buy windows separately.)
I'm a big fan of ASUS laptops, Micheal. Best quality and "bang or the buck." Since you need a bit of portability, this miniature version of my G73JH -- the G53JH -- is worth considering. at $1500, it's more than you want to spend, but you won't get better bang for your buck in a gaming laptop.
I have the 17.3" version. WHile it's big, it's pretty light. This one is only 15.6", so might be more appropriate to your portability requirement.
http://www.excaliberpc.com/598447/asus- ... ebook.htmlI'm surprised the 50% markup thing is still true. My understanding was that for comparable specs and build quality apple was still pretty competitive, but that it competes in a very small section of the market - high end hardware (with the lamentable exception of the GPUs, important note for gamers), and high end build. There are cheaper solutions, even for similar specs, but not with the same build, or for the same build, but not for the same specs. I havent kept a close eye on it though, so I may be poorly informed on this these days.
As for OSX making techies cringe, we're just getting into ranty ranty I dont understandy land - I work with guys building leading edge trading platforms, end user interfaces, and everything in between. Guess what? Unix based platforms and OSX pretty popular.
Now, if what you mean is... you dont like it, and dont understand why anyone would disagree - that's fine, but not the absolute 'its terrible and the fact huge numbers of people disagree with me makes them non technical fashionistas unable to discern what they're paying for' statement you're making. It's just... deluded. I'm somewhat bewildered by it.
In terms of real world use cases, Mike, heres my experience:
OSX is, for me, a better platform because my background is Unix, and I know how to build BSD layer software, use perl, etc, so its very much more customisable for my skillset 'under the hood' than windows
It provides very usable implementations of my common 'consumer' apps - Instant messenger, IRC, web browsers, etc - idle time.
Office 2008 on it is good, but I miss the ribbon.
Parallels lets me spin up XP any time I hit a windows only bit of corporate gack on the intranet.
While it will play games, Steve Jobs is not a gamer, and the apple video cards are /always/ gimp compared to the windows ones - my MBP which is now ... 4? 5? years old, is still going strong, but shipped with an ATI 1600. The latest MBP ships with a GT330M
I find the OSX platform generally has a rich high quality 'indie dev' scene where you can pick up cheap, good apps for prosumer fiddling like Acorn and Pixelmator if you're averse to warezing things like photoshop.
The OSX interface semantics are FAR better than XP once you're used to them. There is also generally good integration between OSX apps via systemwide services - the address book, keychain, growl messaging, etc, make for good cooperation between apps.- I havent used Win7 at all though, as our company hasnt yet rolled out, and I really never use windows at home any more, so this gap may have been closed.
I treat my hardware bad, and I have been very impressed by the reliability of the build apple have supplied, and their aftermarket service has been amazing - even out of warranty things have been swapped out, no questions asked, and the time I had an actual problem with the laptop they sent a courier to pick it up, fixed it, and returned it next day.
As Talya says though, Asus have extraordinarily high build quality in their higher end systems, and all of them have good quality control. Its worth understanding though, that the physical build (casing, etc) on a 'cheap' asus wont be up to an 'expensive' mac or asus. It really may be worth going to a store and 'touching the metal' as it were to get a feel yourself.
You'll get max bigots, no doubt. You'll get the macaphobes too. I genuinely dont believe there is a movement of silver spoon idiots making up the bulk of the mac buying public though - you might want to borrow a mac for a bit to see if you care about the differences.
Final point; if you do go Wintel rather than apple, but aren't entirely certain, you might want to check the 'hackintosh' compatibility lists before you buy. While its more of a pain to get OSX running on Windows than it is to get Windows running on apple hardware, it is relatively straightforward, so you're not locking yourself into a platform forever. I very seriously considered a windows system for the better GPU & hackintosh for my last desktop.
Everyone I know who has gone mac is delighted, but they tend to be 'productivity' rather than 'gamer' users.