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Posted

For the most part, unless you are willing to put a bit more time and thought into your computer, Windows is more useful for two reasons - there's more software for it (you can just go to any computer store and they will have software that is compatable with Windows, there's no such guarentee with Linux) and Windows is simpler with hardware (plug and play devices and more drivers written for it). However, if you are willing to invest a little time (and it's not very much), Linux is user friendly, for the most part, more stable, and safer.

Posted

linux also has more "free" programs than windows. Awesome for the student with a tight budjet, who is weary of the law.

lixux has more Open source software, awesome for the programmer.

Scientists shouldn't use computers too much, they're best put to use in physical research. If they douse computers in research they better be a programmer or know a good one, because scientific software is rather specific in it's functions and not always available regardless of platforms.

Four your average home user, windows is bette for all the resons pgrmdave listed.

 

I use windows, I spend too much effort elsewhere to spare it on my computer when not absolutely necissary.

Posted

I spend the entire workday in front of an Apple Mac where I do web editor work like writing, photoshop slave tasks, pubilshing etc.

 

For web design at home I still use a Windows PC because I use Dreamweaver and have some plugins that I bought for it, plus I use a lot of commercial music software that is not currently equalled on Linux (although it's coming!).

 

But I spend more and more time on my Linux lappy, which runs Kubuntu, and has just about everything I and my wife need to use the web - surfing, paying bills, checking e-mail, chatting etc. We also run open office 2 and connect our digital camera to it (there are some excellent programs for free).

 

Like Gahd says, Linux takes more time for some of the basic tasks, so Windows is still the OS of choice for most people, but Linux is catching up as a mainstream OS and it's not a bad idea to try it out.

Posted

But if you were using MacOSX its built-in spellchecker would tell you that usefull is not the correct spelling of "useful" and that "compatable", "guarentee", "budjet", "necissary", "pubilshing" and "lixux" in this thread are also incorrect. :)

 

As for "more software for Windows" I'd agree that there's about 30,000 more viruses and 200,000 more "crapware" programs than for Mac. Sometimes I wonder how I manage to be so productive on my Macs. Could it be that my selection of the 60,000+ available programs just work and I don't have to waste time installing anti-virus, anti-spyware and reinstalling Windows every month?

 

Sorry, just winding you up. :D

Posted
Winding who up? I love my Mac...but I hate that it's the most expensive OS you can own.

I'm not sure what you mean. I paid about 80 GBP for MacOS 10.4 "Tiger" from Amazon. Is that significantly dearer than the equivalent Windows OS? (I could, of course, have used ripped-off copy had I felt so inclined).

 

Apart from that, the new Mac Mini that I just bought for my Mum came complete with Tiger as well as iMovie, etc. Most of the other software that I use is freeware or real cheap shareware and works great.

 

Taking into account the basic reliability of the hardware and software (an average Mac lasts me from 5 to 10 years - I just gave away my ancient still-perfect beige G3/233) I think the cost of ownership is very reasonable. I own 5 Macs at present and I got them all (used) from eBay. So far the biggest expense has been a replacement battery for my iBook but most other maintenance items (hard drives etc.) and peripherals (monitors, printers) are used with PCs so the cost is the same.

Posted
I'm not sure what you mean. I paid about 80 GBP for MacOS 10.4 "Tiger" from Amazon. Is that significantly dearer than the equivalent Windows OS? (I could, of course, have used ripped-off copy had I felt so inclined).

 

To run Mac OSX with any juice you need a horribly expensive computer, and it's all Apple products inside out (or at best Apple-certified third part stuff...I had my PowerBook G4 1Ghz upgraded from 768MB to 1GB RAM and it cost over $200 (the price of a PowerBook is about 2-3 times that of an equivalent PC).

 

Buy any Mac and lo and behold - it comes without a monitor, keyboard, and mouse unless you buy an iMac or a laptop, and they are both a pain in the *** to upgrade - and the components are extraordinarily expensie. The iLife package is great, yes, but I've owned iLife 1, 2 and 2005 and frankly haven't used it much at all.

 

Apart from that, the new Mac Mini that I just bought for my Mum came complete with Tiger as well as iMovie, etc. Most of the other software that I use is freeware or real cheap shareware and works great.

 

That's good for you. Comparing software doesn't really matter, though. I can get the same software for both: Adobe Creative Suite 2, for example, or equivalents: Logic 7 for Mac/Cubase SX3 for PC.

 

The fact is that you pay extremely much for Mac hardware. The Mini plus monitor plus keyboard plus mouse will set you back more than the price of a great PC desktop.

 

I have an old G3/400 Mhz under my desktop. It runs Tiger if I don't use it for anything. But it's a great doorstop.

Posted
To run Mac OSX with any juice you need a horribly expensive computer, and it's all Apple products inside out (or at best Apple-certified third part stuff...I had my PowerBook G4 1Ghz upgraded from 768MB to 1GB RAM and it cost over $200 (the price of a PowerBook is about 2-3 times that of an equivalent PC).

 

Yes, new Macs aren't for those on a low income. I guess it keeps the plebs out! :)

But I buy most of mine second hand and they still last 5 years plus, by which time the technology is obsolete. I only bought a new Mac Mini for my Mum because there weren't any decent used ones available before Christmas.

 

Buy any Mac and lo and behold - it comes without a monitor, keyboard, and mouse

 

My son bought a PC and had to pay for the keyboard, mouse and monitor. They weren't free - and the darn (cheap) PC to date has had two replacement mother boards, two replacement power supplies, a replacement hard drive, a replacement CDROM/DVD drive (which has just failed again) and a replacement monitor. He's also replaced the keyboard and mouse (twice) because they were unreliable. Most of this was under warranty so it was still "cheap" but look at the inconvenience (and the number of times it lost all of his files and the number of times he had to reinstall Windows). And it's barely 2 years old.

 

In contrast, at the same time I bought a used G4 tower to which I fitted a new Hard drive and memory battery (those are the bits that fail) and I haven't had a single problem. Tell a lie, I had a corrupted printer driver and had to download a piece of freeware to fix it. But you see the difference. :D

 

unless you buy an iMac or a laptop, and they are both a pain in the *** to upgrade - and the components are extraordinarily expensive

 

But surely the same applies to any computer? If you buy a laptop or a PC with integral flat-screen monitor (is there one?) to run Windows, it'll be a pain to upgrade - and not cheap - simply because of the way they have to use smaller (expensive) parts which are harder to access because of the way the things have to be bolted together.

 

Mind you, I have two Apple iBooks (G3) and replacing the battery, memory, airport card or keyboard is a (less than) two minute job. (Anything else goes wrong, just trash it and buy a replacement off eBay for $350.)

 

Hmm, anyway, we're drifting off-topic (sorry). I find OSX is the most useful but my Macs can also run Linux (ugh) or Windows under "Virtual PC" (ugh). The "ugh" is simply my impression of the unfriendly user interface and yukky graphics. And have you seen the previews of Vista? :)

Posted
My son bought a PC and had to pay for the keyboard, mouse and monitor. They weren't free - and the darn (cheap) PC to date has had two replacement mother boards, two replacement power supplies, a replacement hard drive, a replacement CDROM/DVD drive (which has just failed again) and a replacement monitor. He's also replaced the keyboard and mouse (twice) because they were unreliable. Most of this was under warranty so it was still "cheap" but look at the inconvenience (and the number of times it lost all of his files and the number of times he had to reinstall Windows). And it's barely 2 years old.

 

A sample of one is hardly useful. I built my PC about 5 years back and have upgraded it piece by piece (replacing motherboard, graphics card, audio card etc as money allows and need arises).

 

But I could buy a brand new PC with twice the specs for about $1,200, including a 19" flatscreen, keyboard and mouse - and a gig of RAM. Show me the equivalent Mac product... :)

 

Don't get me wrong. We probably agree on the usability of Macs in general. They don't last forever for me because the software I have to use dictates better machines.

 

BTW my daughter (5 years) uses a Pentium 133 laptop with 64MB RAM and a passive LCD screen...excellent for children's games. It's a wonder it still works but it does.

 

To bring the thread back on topic: If you want to run Mac OSX, you need an Apple computer and they are more expensive than PCs.

 

If you want to run Windows, the choice is much wider and you can get brand new stuff quite cheap.

 

If you want to run Linux, you can make do with old computers.

Posted
To bring the thread back on topic: If you want to run Mac OSX, you need an Apple computer and they are more expensive than PCs.

Allow me to correct you there. You can run OSX on a PC if you really must. See:

 

http://www.uneasysilence.com/os-x-proven-hacked-and-running-on-an-ordinary-pc/

 

Also here: http://osx86.theplaceforitall.com/howto/

 

.. but this link seems dead so use the Google cache instead:

http://72.14.203.104/search?q=cache:OIuU_vX-MPcJ:osx86.theplaceforitall.com/howto/+has+got+OS+x+to+run+on&hl=en

 

There are other hacks, too, but I don't have time to search for them all right now (and you probably don't care anyway!) :confused:

Posted

Yeah, but that is hardly relevant for the original poster - plus it requires a killer machine to work. Oh, and it means using hacked and cracked software which is not something I'd be proud of promoting.

Posted
For the most part, unless you are willing to put a bit more time and thought into your computer, Windows is more useful for two reasons - there's more software for it

that is the most wrongest statement i have seen made in a while... unless you count viruses and spyware, linux has much more software then windows, and has been that way for a while.... simply put, i have over 3000 pieces of software installed on my computer, and it takes up only about 10 gigs of space on my system...

Linux or Windows?

Which is better for a home user?

A programmer?

A Scientist?

A High School Student

Linux

depends on who you are

Linux definitely

still linux

and still linux, cuz it teaches you a lot about computers in general, and if you have a nice laptop with a supported graphics card, you can amaze your friends with xgl and xfce (trust me, really, really cool, easily beats exposee, by miles, i should add) and still be able to run apps blazingly fast, and be able to install any software you can possibly imagine without having to pay a dime for it...

Posted

having finally had a rig that I didn't intend on using for anything outside my com apps (browsing, aim, irc, and p2p) I have to say, for that linux owns all, this way and back, but if you're looking to expand out of those uses, windows will make life immeasurably easier.

Posted

you left out a few things that are quite simple with linux as well, lets see, word processing, sound edditing, music encoding, cd/dvd burning/ripping to the hard drive, viewing media (mplayer has support for just about every imaginable audio/video format you can possibly imagine and much more), impressing your friends, coding, anything that has to do with the internet (from services like servers to safe and secure browsing and downloading things), anything that has to do with computer security, making your computer into something that normal people would think its not (like a kegorator or a dvr or a satellite receiver box), creating devices for computer (linux kernel is millions of times easier to program for then windows), work environment (ability to customize for a certain job), databasing (MS SQL server blows), any kind of information processing, simulations, mapping, texturing, hell it is easier to develop applications for gtk then it is to use the windows api.... and much more....

Posted
you left out a few things that are quite simple with linux as well, lets see, word processing, sound edditing, music encoding, cd/dvd burning/ripping to the hard drive, viewing media (mplayer has support for just about every imaginable audio/video format you can possibly imagine and much more), impressing your friends, coding, anything that has to do with the internet (from services like servers to safe and secure browsing and downloading things), anything that has to do with computer security, making your computer into something that normal people would think its not (like a kegorator or a dvr or a satellite receiver box), creating devices for computer (linux kernel is millions of times easier to program for then windows), work environment (ability to customize for a certain job), databasing (MS SQL server blows), any kind of information processing, simulations, mapping, texturing, hell it is easier to develop applications for gtk then it is to use the windows api.... and much more....

 

I just used my examples... my dedicated 'nix rig is an old r31 POS that's been robbed of half it's ram. Good points though, you're 100% correct.

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