Deimos, on 07 September 2010 - 11:07 AM, said:
Hm... so much wrong... where to start...
Macs have had multibutton mouse capability for ages, even before OS X came around. They just didn't ship with them.
Maybe we should start with the fact that the OS can be run on damn near any x64 hardware. Yes, you can buy from newegg, throw it together, and run the Mac OS.
Next, the "chipset" issue... if you knew what you were talking about, you would know that a real mac does not use a standard intel chipset, they use special ones developed by apple and intel together, each mac model has a custom made motherboard. They do not even have a BIOS. They use something called an EFI or Extensible Firmware Interface.
Oh, and about drivers, the Mac OS does in fact have drivers. You can in fact, change them. I have custom drivers that allow me to use Mac, Windows, Unix, and even some obsolete hard drive formats. There are, in relation to the kernels for non-EFI (BIOS) hardware, drivers for most PC hardware, such as video cards.
Oh, and why, if the hardware is so "ridiculously expensive", is it that PC magazines gave Mac laptops running windows their highest ratings? Maybe because you actually get what you pay for in the hardware. Anyone who's ever performed surgery on a mac knows it is far easier to replace or (as you say is impossible) upgrade any component.
The desktop hardware is equally high quality and sells quite well, the iMac has been increasing Apple's market share for years in the desktop arena. You don't see many Mac Pro towers, because not many people need that kind of firepower, but again, for the price, you won't find anything better, even if you do run windows on it.
I personally disagreed with Apple's decision to switch to intel processors. The old PowerPC chips made by IBM and Motorolla were technically superior. They can now be found in every PS3 and Xbox 360. The original 36- development kits were Powermac G5s.
Oh, and I would like to point out that, while the windows taskbar is old, the Mac OS had a similar feature before OS X that showed open programs that were minimized on the bottom of the screen. It just wasn't enabled by default. They've been stealing ideas from eachother since they started, having stolen both their concepts from a scrapped Xerox project.
I am the first to admit that Apple has fukked up from time to time. They have more epic failures on record than any other major company I can think of that's still in business.
Enjoy your BSODs, Defrags, Reformats, Viruses, Trojans, Spyware, Adware, etc. There is a reason that any organization requiring real computers, even if they don't buy macs, NEVER uses windows. They learned their lesson when the Navy tried using windows to run a destroyer. It had to be towed back to port after windows crashed.
I am typing this on a machine that can boot Windows XP, Windows 7, Mac OS 10.6, and any flavor of linux I feel like playing with that's x86-64 compatible.
Man, you really need to get your facts straight.
OS X does not natively run on all x86 hardware, as a matter of fact, the kernel is not compiled to run with anything other than most Apple hardware. A few releases by Hazard, iATKOS and Kalyway (might be others, I am not sure) removed the hardware checks and added support for more hardware. Good luck running OS X on an AMD build.
http://wiki.osx86pro.../Apple_hardware
Here's a good list of hardware that has been supported natively by OSX. You're pretty much limited to an Intel or nForce north bridge, and some select hardware. I've tested this, and had OS X dual boot on my Sony Vaio for shits and giggles, worked great (since it was virtually 100% Intel hardware). My workstation, which has an AMD chipset, is not entirely compatible. Because AMD sucks? Surely not. Because Apple is a walled off ecosystem? Yes.
EFI has been available on Intel motherboards since its inception. Plenty of Intel server boards (starting around 1999-2000, I believe) have had EFI as an alternative to the standard BIOS system; not "Apple specific" thing, so let's cut the crap
//edit: Figured you probably read about EFI on wiki, so I decided to go pull the facts out myself. Here's a nice quote from the "Apple-Intel architecture" article. It says that EFI was "designed by Intel, it was chosen by Apple to replace Open Firmware, used on PowerPC architectures." Wait wait.. designed by Intel, chosen by Apple. As a matter of fact, I did more research and found no mention that Apple was EVER involved in the development. Apple simply chose it during their transition to Intel hardware. Man, I can't believe you tried to credit Apple for its development.
Mac OS has kernel modules, just like any other UNIX kernel.
Macbooks are easy to work with, absolutely. But the only the new renditions. Ever hear of the polycarbonate iBooks? No? Well here is a 12 page guide on replacing the hard drive:
http://www.ifixit.co...lacement/731/1. And I'm not so sure why your better performance argument is being supported by the ease of disassembly. Non sequitur, much? Oh and in those PC magazine reviews, are you talking about equally spec'ed hardware, or a bare-bones $500 cheaper PC laptop vs. a better equipped Mac? Yet another fallacy right there.
As for Mac Pros, for the same price you can get a relatively better performing machine that is targeted towards professionals from any of the major PC manufacturers. Apple charges a premium for the hardware because, officially, OS X will only run on them.
You disagree with Apple's decision to switch to Intel? It was not economically feasible to continue developing on processors that were getting hammered in the price vs. performance category. Apple made a smart choice because you now have more powerful machines for less (or for higher margins to Apple, you choose).
Let's see.
BSODs: 0 due to Windows. Due to a failed hard drive? 1. Due to shitty RAM that I put in? 1.
Defrags: LOL! HFS+ (you know, the filesystem OS X uses) has issues with fragmentation, like ALL file systems. OS X runs defragmentation in the background. Scheduled defragmentation in Windows takes a minute to enable.
Reformats: XP Pro on the laptop the same as it's been since.. 2 years ago, had to reinstall after my hard drive crashed (stupid Hitachi drive). Windows 7 on the same machine for 1 year, changed all my hardware so installed it fresh.
Viruses: Sorry, I don't open "FunnyDogVideo.exe" every time someone forwards a chain letter, nor do I browse shitty porn sites and use Internet Explorer 4.0.
Trojans: See above.
Spyware: See above.
Adware: See above.
By the way, while we're on the subject of secure software, you may have missed this:
http://www.engadget....safari-said-to/
Do you REALLY think they run Macs in "organizations requiring real computers"... wait a minute, let me back track and read that sentence. You said.. "real computers." Funny, the hardware inside your Mac is virtually off-the-shelf Intel. Guess our "real computers" are less "real" then yours. I was going to say how UNIX-based OSs and Windows are in use at the majority of organizations that need "real computers," and then back it up with references galore. But when I read that statement... oh God, your credibility as anything another than an Apple zealot went out the door.
I LOVE your argument about a machine that can boot anything. Thanks for praising Windows and Linux, buddy, because they don't lock the OS to specific hardware. You do realize the reason that OS X will not natively run on non-Apple hardware is intentional on the part of Apple, right? And that your piss-poor attempt at making the Apple hardware sound holier-than-though has just made you look like a fool?
You should have been defending Apple where they truly excel, like in physical hardware build quality (of the chassis), industrial and product design and UI simplicity. New Macbooks are truly stunning and have amazing build (the polycarbonate ones are just as bad as $500 PC laptops), iPhones have great build and layout, Apple TV is beautifully designed (both the original and the new one) and their software looks like a designer worked on it instead of a programmer (which is a good thing!). Instead you went off bullshitting about things that are not only trivial, but erroneous as well.
I had a long fun day working today, I couldn't imagine how much fun I'd have reading your reply in the evening. Thank you for entertaining me with your "knowledge"...
Edited by Serge, 11 September 2010 - 05:54 PM.