I'm an IT guy.
I support 2 schools that together have more than 600 Macs. From the IT stand point the apple is better because it is a toaster. Regardless of rev version, and even OS version to a large extent, most of the system files can be copied and pasted from one machine to another. I can create uniform experiences and all the machine from single universal images using tools included in the apple OS. My only real complaint about Mac is that identical machines, sequential serial numbers, with bit by bit cloned hard drives will behave differently. It really is the damnedest thing.
The windows machines aren't as easy, I took me ages to streamline a process of making a damn near universally bootable windows partition that was prepared for hardware differences with all possible drivers installed and pre-configured; that I have to update with every new purchase. Then the actual creation of the image files relies on third party software (not a real problem just an annoyance).
In my personal life, away from work, I'm a PC guy. Largely because at most I'm only dealing with 3 machines (Desktop, Laptop, and the Linux server their backups are stored on). I can play games and still use the vast majority of the creative software that exists on Mac (the only one I use and don't have on PC in Final Cut Pro), not to mention the $500 minimum price deference between Mac and PC for equivalent specked hardware.
I use both and enjoy both, they are too similar to hate one or the other. If macs ever drop to the same price as competing PC hardware I might even buy a personal one.
I support 2 schools that together have more than 600 Macs. From the IT stand point the apple is better because it is a toaster. Regardless of rev version, and even OS version to a large extent, most of the system files can be copied and pasted from one machine to another. I can create uniform experiences and all the machine from single universal images using tools included in the apple OS. My only real complaint about Mac is that identical machines, sequential serial numbers, with bit by bit cloned hard drives will behave differently. It really is the damnedest thing.
The windows machines aren't as easy, I took me ages to streamline a process of making a damn near universally bootable windows partition that was prepared for hardware differences with all possible drivers installed and pre-configured; that I have to update with every new purchase. Then the actual creation of the image files relies on third party software (not a real problem just an annoyance).
In my personal life, away from work, I'm a PC guy. Largely because at most I'm only dealing with 3 machines (Desktop, Laptop, and the Linux server their backups are stored on). I can play games and still use the vast majority of the creative software that exists on Mac (the only one I use and don't have on PC in Final Cut Pro), not to mention the $500 minimum price deference between Mac and PC for equivalent specked hardware.
I use both and enjoy both, they are too similar to hate one or the other. If macs ever drop to the same price as competing PC hardware I might even buy a personal one.
Building your own is really the only way to go. The i7s are the best on the block right now, but for price/performance I'd grab an AMD X6. Also ATI/AMD video cards dominate in multi-card builds on all points (performance, scaling, and energy use (http://www.tomshardware.com/ did extensive testing)). http://www.newegg.com/ very often has special combo deals on cases and PSUs that can save you a bundle make sure to check them out after you've crunched the watt requirements (always buy 20% more power than you need by the numbers). Lastly Amazon has the best deals on HDDs currently, I wouldn't use larger than 1.5TB drives for storage.OutofMind634 said:, I have a friend who suggests I build my computer from scratch, but I'll defiantly check out the link.