Macs

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Crises^

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DugMachine said:
I don't like Macs. Don't like the overpriced hardware or the OS but that's just due to lack of experience with it.

If I can talk you out of buying one and letting me build you a good PC instead then I'll do it. I have a few friends who want to get into PC gaming and they say macs are the way to go.. -__________________________-
Thank you but I already own a high end pc for games, was just wondering about why Macs are so popular and what the OS is like to use.
 

Crises^

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wulf3n said:
xTc212 said:
Now to me alot of those statement seem like out right lies like the hardware statement for instance, I came to that conclusion by looking at the specs and price.
...
Why is the price so high for the specs they show does it come with stuff I do not know about.
What is the OS like to use.
wait... how is overcharging the same as lying?
It was this page that seemed like it was lying http://www.apple.com/why-mac/better-hardware/
the better hardware line is bull because pc's are so verified in specs and materials you can't say that like my pc for instance is high end.

It isn't really lying more misleading if you get me(specs wise).
 

Crises^

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Thank you all for your comments it has defiantly shed some light on the differences, pros and cons and have to say I'm happy that their was no flaming of any sort which is shocking being the internet but again this forum is great for discussions and debates so yeah :D

Think I'm going to try that Hackintosh and also a linUx boot as well and mess with all three to learn about them some more.
 

Paranoah

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I am a huge PC fanboy, but i have to admit macs are a little better than pcs for work related stuff as far as i know there are more and better software for fx music making/mixing, Movie making, 3D design, but is it worth the extra like 10%-30% for just that? maybe if your a company i can understand that but for home computers i think its a load of BS, but hey if you got the money for it go ahead.
 

Hagi

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My dad is currently a Mac user. Used to be a PC user for a long time and will be a PC user again very soon.

He's used to PC-cycles. Meaning you can keep your PC for over 5 years if all you do is basic office stuff and e-mail without having to replace them.

Microsoft generally keeps its older OS updated and supported for that amount of time, meaning you're not forced to upgrade.

Apple... not so much... Whilst at first his experience was great and smooth after 3 or so years without spending hundreds of euros to upgrade the OS problems start ramping up. Along with a generally incompetent Apple customer service he's getting quite sick of it all and will soon be buying a new Windows PC.

This probably doesn't impact most people here a lot, we gamers tend to purchase all the latest stuff. But do be warned that whilst using an Apple you're not just paying more up-front. You're also going to be shelving over even more money to keep up with the latest OS, which you'll need to keep your other software working.
 

Joccaren

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Mar 29, 2011
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xTc212 said:
What aspects do Macs have that are better than Windows/Linux based Pc's
Hardware wise: Nothing, they are largely inferior in a cost-power ration, and probably inferior overall if you compared the best possible non-Mac PC to the best possible Mac-PC.
OS side I'll cover with you're third point.

Why is the price so high for the specs they show does it come with stuff I do not know about.
The price is so high because Apple knows they can rip people off. Some people are utterly uninformed when it comes to the world of PCs, and will see a $2500 Mac and say "That must be a powerful gaming machine", then see a $1000 desktop and say "That must be a piece of crap", when they'll actually have equal specs, and the only difference will be the operating system.
Neither is harder to set up or use, but Macs get away with being overpriced thanks to Apple's popularity carried from things like the Iphone and Ipad, and tech stores inflating the prices themselves and pushing them to people to earn a bigger profit. No, there is no extra stuff that it comes with that you don't know about.
Macs are supposedly more aesthetically pleasing, which is a cause for price increase, but personally I prefer the stark look of a good full tower case with LEDs and fans running, so that it screams of power, compared to the minimalistic and rather soft look of most Macs.

What is the OS like to use.
Depends on what you want out of it, and what you're used to.
For me, who is used to Windows, its a pain in the ass, though some people I know who have used Macs most of their life and are only now swapping to PCs can work it without any problem. On a basic level of just using it to connect to the Internet and such, its not that much different to Windows in difficulty if you know what you're doing, and thanks to the relative unpopularity of Mac systems to Windows systems, not many viruses are developed and put on the Internet that target the Mac OS. This does not, however, mean that there are none - as one of my friends found out the hard way.
If you like control over your OS, however, a Mac is the worst path you can take. It is a lot more locked down than either Windows or Linux, and generally has less third party support as well. For advanced users, Mac OS generally fails compared to Windows in what you can accomplish if you wish to.
 

ThatGuy

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Macs are really well-designed. The build quality is solid and generally made to last, with a lot of thought put into ergonomics and user experience. Specs-wise, though, they definitely can't compare to PCs at the same price point.

I've owned two dell laptops, a thinkpad, and an HP, and the only one that has come close to my macbook air in terms of durability, battery life and ergonomics is the thinkpad. I actually still prefer the thinkpad's keyboard to the macbook's, but they're both good. The dells ended up falling apart after about 2 years of use. I'm careful with my stuff, but those laptops apparently aren't made for more than a couple years of use.
 

Joshimodo

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I use both daily as a necessity to my job.


I can't see any realistic reason why people should own a Mac aside from aesthetics. The OS has some benefits, but it also has a ton of drawbacks.

The price is ridiculous, as are the restrictions.

The virus/stability is on par. There's nothing special about OSX being less prone to viruses, it's simply that they have been significantly less popular over the years meaning there was less gain in spreading viruses or other malware. Windows has gotten more stable over the years, and Mac OS less so.



Ultimately, Macs are simply not worth it. For those saying "it's easier" and that justifies the 1.5x or 2x price markup, you're deluding yourselves. Neither OSX or Windows is difficult to use, and both have the same basic principles that take minutes to understand.

They do have gorgeous screens however. The drawback once again is price and the fact you have to pay to remove the god-awful gloss coating that comes as standard. I'd prefer to pick up a high-end Dell or LG IPS panel for a few hundred quid less, since they have much better colour reproduction.
 

wulf3n

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xTc212 said:
wulf3n said:
xTc212 said:
Now to me alot of those statement seem like out right lies like the hardware statement for instance, I came to that conclusion by looking at the specs and price.
...
Why is the price so high for the specs they show does it come with stuff I do not know about.
What is the OS like to use.
wait... how is overcharging the same as lying?
It was this page that seemed like it was lying http://www.apple.com/why-mac/better-hardware/
the better hardware line is bull because pc's are so verified in specs and materials you can't say that like my pc for instance is high end.

It isn't really lying more misleading if you get me(specs wise).
Ok, I see it now, especially the part of the url "better-hardware", better than what apple?
 

DoomyMcDoom

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BeerTent said:
xTc212 said:
What aspects do Macs have that are better than Windows/Linux based Pc's?
Why is the price so high for the specs they show does it come with stuff I do not know about?
What is the OS like to use?
I am not certified. I am biased. Take what you will.
Duly noted, but I have to say a few things.

1. Macs are designed to be easy. They're designed so that you can jump on, copy the applications you want on them, and be good to go in a matter of minutes, instead of a matter of hours. They're flashy, and they only show the options that are relevant to you when you need it. There's no need for advanced options, and there's no need to manage hardware because the mac is designed to be one propreitary unit. Therefore, the user has no worries or fears when it comes to using it. If something happens, the Mac is more than happy to show you the solution, and if there's an even bigger problem? No problem. There's a Mac Certified technician near you.
I've found it generally easy enough to use any windows OS after 2000, easy to teach the use of to pretty well anyone to the point of, if you don't want to meddle with advanced options, you don't have to. My grandmother learned how to use a windows machine in a matter of hours, she has trouble with almost any piece of technology, so this amused me.
Same with a large number of people who I know mothers, grandmothers, generally the crowd mac aims to impress. Once they learn how to click on stuff, and to install things(see clicking on stuff) they tend to have no trouble.
Also, the number of computer repair places around is staggering, and free support forums for almost any problem you could concievably encounter are just a google search away.
2. Macs are expensive because they're often mid/high machines for the time. On top of that, Mac's are thin, and highly compact, which also drives prices up. However, we can only explain so much of the price. Some of it is branding. (Just like how less Froot Loops are more expensive than 2KG of noname "fruit circles")
The hardware specifications do not in any way justify the price, almost all of it is branding, I have seen ASUS PC products that are just as thin as apple products. The reason for the cost being so high is the result of the proprietary nature of the equipment, when you hold a monopoly, and a large rabid fanbase, you can price your stuff however you see fit.

3. From a technical support standpoint... Abysmal. Remember when I mentioned that it's designed to hide advanced options? There's also no registry, and no method to edit plist files by default. I have yet to find the Devmgr, and the control panel is restricted to 12 or so items, and you don't have numerous options to configure each and every little thing like you do in the Windows OS. You have virtually no control over your own local security policy, and on top of that, Compatibility is a fucking disaster. Macs aren't designed to work with everything, and Leopard's outright incompatibility with Flash 11 is a constant headache for me at work now. I know leopard's old (2007) but there are still hundreds, upon hundreds of people that use it. Students, I'll add.
This is all true, I've used macs before and I personally think that if they had an advanced settings option available somewhere for people who aren't finger stumblingly retarded with technology, so that there would be some actual options for customization.

Mac's push on propreitary equipment and software also screams anti-competitive. You want to hook up a 3rd party monitor? Too fucking bad. Buy our $100 monitor, or our $30 adapter. Want to produce something for us? Pay out the ass, or you'll never see the connector that goes between your equipment, and our popular ipod. While it's great that you'll get a simple, well designed machine that will run fast for years to come, your also purchasing the equivilant of a car that has no hood. You can't see what's inside it. You can't maintain it, or break it apart. And when you try? It hides like it's keeping a secret.
This is also mainly due to the monopoly they have, and want to maintain, would you want to allow for competition in a market you control, especially when it may hurt your proffit margins noticably? The answer they chose is a resounding NO, and I honestly, cannot blame them.

I want to be mac Certified. But I don't have the ability, because for that very certification, you need to pay out the ass, and buy a Mac. Their OS will hide from anything that doesn't have the right hardware, and virtualization of the Mac OS on a standard PC is understandably impossible.

xTc212 said:
Can you install the Mac OS onto a PC? as I would love to see what the differences are.

Also is there different versions like Linux where its taste or new builds like Windows?

And finally while the OS is less buggy what level of freedom do you have with it is it completely open like Linux, or is it like Windows where it is open but there is alot of stuff that you can't change, or is it even more closed off?
I'll edit these three questions in...

1. No. Mac's are designed for a certain architecture. Don't have an Intel? Don't have the right hardware? the OS ain't gonna work.

2. The Mac OS goes up like Windows. Every so often you need to pay something like $30CAD to update from Lion to Mountain Lion. Which is probably the biggest perk the MAC OS has over windows. While the hardware is expensive, you simply cannot argue with that price.

3. Look up, really. It is a lot less buggy, and you do have some freedom to configure a lot of basic settings, but again, from a TS standpoint, the user doesn't have much to go on.
As for Pricing, I CAN and WILL argue the price, I can buy a PC, have it built by NCIX and shipped to my door, for less than $1000 it will have all of the power required to play all of the games I have or can buy on high settings, and will stay usable as a gaming rig for YEARS, and when I do wish to upgrade it, I can do so at a competitively low cost, even if I got someone else to install the parts, and payed them for it... take a stick of ram, if I save $100 or more on my ram over the same upgrade on a mac, paying someone to put it in for me a sum of $50 or so(as is average around here for upgrade installation) I still save $50... If I decide to install it myself, a simple matter of popping the door panel on my case open, and plugging it in(while my pc is off of course) I save $100, and I get to feel less like a cerebrally disfigured manually incapable idiot, and more connected to my PC at the SAME TIME!

Hell if I want to put my computer together myself, it's easier nowadays than most lego sets, comes with full instructions with PICTURES, and takes all of an hour tops including OS and driver installation, BAM ready to game, costs me a ton less money...

Better deal no?
 

Not G. Ivingname

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xTc212 said:
Before I get started It is only fair to point this out.
I have never owned or used a Mac so this is really a question to people who have used a Mac(doesn't have to be some one who likes them though), Please lets not make this a flame war.

One of my friends is always on about how great Macs are and I wanted to see why so I went to their site.

Now to me alot of those statement seem like out right lies like the hardware statement for instance, I came to that conclusion by looking at the specs and price.

I cannot however speak on the OS or the browser or software as I haven't used one.

My questions are.

What aspects do Macs have that are better than Windows/Linux based Pc's
Why is the price so high for the specs they show does it come with stuff I do not know about.
What is the OS like to use.

Now I won't be buying one as I own a good pc but I would like to know why they are liked by so many people there obviously is a good reason that I do not know about.
I am posting this on from a mac.

It is a MacBook running OSX Leapord an I had it since 2009 as a gift.

It is a piece of SHIT.

Cords always break, doesn't run many games, browser tends to crash a fair bit, so much is wrong with I don't even want to start listing. I have gotten a Trojan Horse once, had to use a third party virus finder to track it down and kill it.

Avoid like the plague, would of replaced it if I could afford it.
 

devotedsniper

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There overpriced for the hardware in them like pretty much all the apple hardware. And the one time i used them i found it horrible the mouse was slow (even when maxed), the keyboard was to thin and small, I couldn't for the life of me figure out how to turn it on (who puts the power button on the back??), windows wouldn't maximize. The one thing i will give them credit for is the os is very smooth but that's about it.

I've been using Windows/linux all my life so i think i'll be sticking with them, hell i hate linux but i'd still choose it over mac.
 

Hawk eye1466

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Personally I hate the mac with a passion but before anyone gets angry I have reasons and even I'll admit they probably aren't fair and it was partly due to some failure on my part but here we go.

The keyboard sucks, I had to type a lot of stuff once and the keys were so unresponsive I was hammering them by the 2 minute mark they space bar also was so useless I just used spell check to fix whatever words were jammed together.

Everything is hidden, Going back to the keyboard for a minute when I was typing and then going back to fix all the places with no spaces I realized that there wasn't an undo button at the top so after a minute of searching I found it buried under at least 2 menus.

I have to save everything to the fucking desktop, I used an iMac that's in my schools computer lab because I had to make a video for a class and I couldn't find a place to save the video clips anywhere except the desktop which meant it ended up buried with all the other files everyone else just saved to the desktop because apparently no one myself included knows how to save anywhere else.

It makes no goddamned sense, This is probably the most biased point but I still think it counts I wanted to change the wallpaper because I was bored and once I picked a picture from my laptop and put it on the mac I discovered I couldn't just right click and set it so I went to the pictures file and it didn't show my picture file so I took it and put it in the pictures file, still not there so then I took the pictures and moved them into the folder with the other pictures, still nothing finally I copied the folder and put it everywhere I could and then it finally appeared I still don't know how but in total it took me a few minutes but still it was aggrivating.

The only other one I can think of is when I was first using the movie program I must have searched forever for the save function to save the movie I had taken 3 times the time I should have because the mouse hated me and I couldn't find the video files but after searching and searching I broke down and asked someone where the save was and they said oh there isn't one you just use the keyboard command and then they saved for me and I decided I'd just wait in line to use the one pc that has the videocards to run the movie software.

But there you have it the proof that I can't use anything but a PC and that I'm probably biased or something but hey clearly I'm probably not qualified to *****.
 

BeerTent

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DoomyMcDoom said:
You've pretty much agreed me with this on every point other than the price of the OS, as I understand? Before the Win8 Price tag came along, the upgrade from Mac OS to Mac OS has essentially fallen on the $20-$40 price range. Considering I'm used to dropping $300 on a new OS that won't nag me for all eternity, I have to be fair and complement Mac for this.

Furthermore, a quick search for a Macbook Pro, 15 inch brought these to my attention.
2.3GHz quad-core Intel Core i7
[can be overclocked to 3.3]
4GB 1600MHz memory
500GB 5400-rpm hard drive1
NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M with 512MB of GDDR5 memory
Built-in battery (7 hours)
I dunno about you, but those are some nice specs. I'd say this is much more than a home user would ever want, and it's not as good as my machine, but it's damn close which makes me put the label of a Mid-to-high end machine. Again, It's not worth $2000, but when you have all of that propreitary equipment in a tiny little laptop that doesn't melt your legs, I'd go for it if the 30% markup was removed.

On the topic of how easy Windows is to use. I agree. The information is out there, but more Windows students employ me despite the %50 off price I offer Mac users. (It evens out to be the same price in the end, because Macs are frustrating as fuck.) I generally find that Windows requires more maintenance than Mac, which is another positive they have, but it's also what's paying my Student loans, so I'm not complaining that students don't want to take the 5 seconds to run Ccleaner.
 

DoomyMcDoom

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BeerTent said:
DoomyMcDoom said:
You've pretty much agreed me with this on every point other than the price of the OS, as I understand? Before the Win8 Price tag came along, the upgrade from Mac OS to Mac OS has essentially fallen on the $20-$40 price range. Considering I'm used to dropping $300 on a new OS that won't nag me for all eternity, I have to be fair and complement Mac for this.

Furthermore, a quick search for a Macbook Pro, 15 inch brought these to my attention.
2.3GHz quad-core Intel Core i7
[can be overclocked to 3.3]
4GB 1600MHz memory
500GB 5400-rpm hard drive1
NVIDIA GeForce GT 650M with 512MB of GDDR5 memory
Built-in battery (7 hours)
I dunno about you, but those are some nice specs. I'd say this is much more than a home user would ever want, and it's not as good as my machine, but it's damn close which makes me put the label of a Mid-to-high end machine. Again, It's not worth $2000, but when you have all of that propreitary equipment in a tiny little laptop that doesn't melt your legs, I'd go for it if the 30% markup was removed.

On the topic of how easy Windows is to use. I agree. The information is out there, but more Windows students employ me despite the %50 off price I offer Mac users. (It evens out to be the same price in the end, because Macs are frustrating as fuck.) I generally find that Windows requires more maintenance than Mac, which is another positive they have, but it's also what's paying my Student loans, so I'm not complaining that students don't want to take the 5 seconds to run Ccleaner.
I do agree with you on the limitations and the areas we both wish mac OS would be improved(for me because it would be nice to have a reason to even consider them, even if I don't end up using them, it's just nice to have middle ground between competitors when it comes to my business).
Thing is, even with a windows OS, I never spent more than $200 on windows, I would grab OEM versions, because I generally never switched my shit around enough to need a new OS install, and due to my understanding of A: having an antivirus program installed, and B: not deleting important registry keys, I never had to reinstall Windows past win 98, which I reinstalled a few times due to data corruption issues with the 9x build being an unstable *****.
And due to my reluctance to use vista(I stuck with windows xp x64 til 7 came out) I've spent like $200(I think the bill was actually $167 or something I had a few other things on the bill with it and it was a bit over $200 in total so, since I can't find the receipt right now, let's call it $200) in the last 7 years or so on OS, and I've never had any major issues...
Lemme just link you to some of the competitors made by ASUS, arguably the most reliably high end PC hardware manufacturers in existence.
http://www.ncix.com/products/?sku=77444&vpn=K75VJ-QH31-CB&manufacture=ASUS
http://www.ncix.com/products/?sku=65174&vpn=K53SV-DH51&manufacture=ASUS
http://www.ncix.com/products/?sku=72034&vpn=A53Z-TH61&manufacture=ASUS&promoid=1354
Yeah, price difference is fucking terrible with macs... That is one of the reasons I will never buy a mac, because if I want to blow $2000 on a laptop or a desktop, it's going to be a MONSTER!
I honestly cannot see a single reason to buy a mac, windows is easy enough to use, it takes very little effort to use it for all the normal uses you would see people using a mac for, and it costs sooooooo much less...

I mean for people who just REALLY like the Mac OS, and have no problem essencially spending $700+ more on a computer just to have a different GUI with less options, power to them, I guess... I saw more promise in apple products along the lines of the original iPods and the fact that with how those evolved it kinda pushed along mobile devices of that kind by forcing competitors to get off their asses and try stuff(whether or not they did anything useful on the other hand is questionable *cough*zune*cough*), but as far as desktop computers and laptops/notebooks, they've got little to no real draw to anyone who is at all concerned about price/device flexibillity.

EDIT: Also the notebooks I linked were just chosen randomly from a lower but not dirt cheap price bracket, with averaging performance stats that would rival the Macbook, feel free to look at the rest of the notebooks/laptops on that site if you really need more reference material, there's a ton of them that are better for cheaper than the macbook, I'm just a lazy bastard.
 

Jfswift

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I owned a Mac laptop a few years ago. I liked how easy the os was to figure out and how stable it ran, never giving me problems. My only criticism
was trying to figure out how to make a movie full screen. It was some obscure button combination and I ended up having to ask a friend how to do it.
 

Yopaz

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Jun 3, 2009
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Well, there's the design which makes people make a second glance and become interested. Apart from that the OS is more optimized for the hardware than Windows because it takes away the choice of hardware. Windows supports drivers to pretty much all the different hardware being produced for home computers while Apple support almost none of it so it's easier to make them work together and specializing where Windows has to be more generic.

Less chance of getting a virus is what draws in some, but is something I consider a bad thing. Less chance of getting a virus may sound like a flawless reasoning behind why using a Mac is safer, but that also means there's less chance you will be protected against getting a virus. You'll be less careful because you don't think it's possible to get one.

Now I am in the PC crowd and the time I have spent using a Mac has been quite nightmarish because of the quality of the computers I have used. I don't like the prices for a decent rig or Apple's business methods and how Apple products require further Apple products to work properly.

As for Macs being more durable... I have a friend with a 6 year old Dell and that still works like a charm. It's all about taking care of your stuff.
 

elvor0

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Calibanbutcher said:
elvor0 said:
Calibanbutcher said:
They are quite durable. The one I have has worked for more than 6 years now and I even bought it used. In the same time, my father has gone through 4 laptops and my little brother has gone through 3 and now upgraded to a new gaming PC.

Both of them spent a lot more than I did overall, with my little brother going through more than 4 times what I paid for my Macbook.
While I'm not saying I don't believe you, I don't really think that's a fair point.

I can only say that they...obviously ain't taking care of them if they've collectively managed to go through SEVEN computers in six years, what on earth are they doing them?. That'd be like me consistently crashing my car in to lamposts and sticking diesel in a petrol car and then saying that BMWs are terrible cars.

Secondly, if they've managed to spend that much money, they're either getting fleeced or buying from really overpriced shops.

And hey, if you want to spend more money because you feel it may annoy someone that's your call, but unless you announce it, no body will know, and you're 700 out of pocket, bit of a weird sentiment if you ask me.

OT: I mean Macs ARE overpriced as hell for what you get, they're pretty much "designer" computers, but even worse in the sense that you get less customisation on them. Anyone who tries to argue otherwise is insane or knows nothing about components.

I don't understand it myself. I haven't got anything against them, but I can't for the life of me see why you'd buy one over windows, not only do windows have far more versatility and the ability to build one from the ground up by standard(as opposed to building a hackintosh), they have far more support in both the software, gaming and hardware scenes, and are cheaper. They still have that irritating hold "apple" button to right click motif (WHY WHY WHY?!) going on too, what's with that?

I'm not even sure where the "they're easier to use" concept comes from either. I mean they're not exactly much different from windows. When it gets to the technical stuff yes, but that's going to be the case with Macs too if you're not tech savvy.

I have to admit, my father does use his laptops mainly for work and he does work them a lot, but the Dells he had seemed to break down quite easily. My little brother on the other hand used his for gaming and he basically managed to get every single one of his laptops to overheat and die.
As for the price issue:
I paid 800 bucks for my macbook. My little brother worked his way through 4 x 500 - 700 bucks worth of laptops and now has a 900 buck gaming-PC.
As for my father: He currently uses a Laptop which cost around 4000 - 5000 bucks, and even this one already had it first break down.
FIVE GRAND? Even the most expensive Alienware laptop is only £2500, which works out at about $3000 given how royally we get screwed over in conversion.

What on earth is it made of? I can only envision a platinum wired, ivory keyboarded with diamond tipped wires, dipped in gold with fan blades made from the wings of freshly slaughtered angels and a cooling system instilled with the urine of christ himself.

I mean I've got a Dell XPS15 and I rag that, it gets so hot it's physically painful to touch, but I've yet to have any problems with it, and I've had it for over a couple of years now.
 

Whateveralot

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Apple is like a religion. It's all good until you start to wonder "why?". It makes no sense for the litiral-minded people.

HOWEVER.

The good thing about Apple products is that there'a hard limit to what you can and what you can't do. On a Mac, you can only do what it's to do. On Windows / Linux, you can do EVERYTHING. This means a user-sided misake is easier to make, as well. This means that overall, there will be less errors and things going wrong.

In the end, it's all in how you use it. But yes, Mac is relatively expensive.