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10 October 2011, 03:32 AM | #61 |
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You should be complimented about your English, it is very good, if I came across in any other way I apologise, it was not my intent.
Perhaps I misunderstood your meaning with regards to apple products, we should agree to disagree, your bad experience possibly tainted your view.
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10 October 2011, 04:14 AM | #62 |
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Absolutely not. In fact i am typing this onmy iphone. I know that most products will definitely break down in a short time. But even if i accept this i can't understand being a fanboy of it. Apple made marketing around a product that in my opinion does not deserv fanatism.
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10 October 2011, 04:30 AM | #63 | |
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What I find bloody hard to believe is at a site like TRF where most folks are Rolex Fan Boys (like me - save for certain folks who stop by to mix it up) that there is such difficulty comprehending the affinity for - and $$$ PREMIUM commanded by - Apple products. You do realize you have just illustrated very adroitly what non-WIS say about watches....they are just inanimate objects (Tools) used to tell time. Not worthy of hype...therefore a CASIO, Timex or Mobile Phone clock will do. Why spend thousands on a steel watch that does what a Swatch watch will do? Does anyone else see the delicious irony here? |
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10 October 2011, 04:37 AM | #64 | |
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Have to use Windows 7 at work, which is actually pretty good, but it's Macs at home, no PC's. Our server got a virus this past week, and we were without our computers for two days, even with the virus protection. My Macs have never gotten a virus in 9 years, and going thru the various versions of Apple's OS-X. But a lot of software still is not available for Mac, which is frustrating. |
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10 October 2011, 04:45 AM | #65 | |
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10 October 2011, 04:52 AM | #66 | |
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However, I do LOVE / appreciate the design, form, function and reliability of Apple hardware and much compatible software...and I will pay a premium for the foregoing. I also like building PCs from scratch...for the sheer pleasure I get out of using high-end components of my choice and playing high-end games. |
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10 October 2011, 05:26 AM | #67 | |
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"if you don't appreciate the thought and nuances" this is my point. What is so great about it. Or do I need to conduct a $1000+ experiment to find out, because it has to be seen to be believed? I just asked a question, nobody I know has a mac, so, no, I don't know jack about them. Oh, and I don't own a Sub., but I do own a Casio.I'm more of a GMT guy. Watches aren't the same. I only ever met one person with a "collection" of computers. He was quite strange.Also, if I sold my watches today, I would not lose a nickel. Computers are a throw away item, they cost more to fix than replace.
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So it's not the steam that causes the failure, but it's water that you notice in the watch after a shower that could lead you to believe the steam damaged the seal, but it's just the unfortunate result of an unserviced mechanical beast. |
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10 October 2011, 05:38 AM | #68 | ||
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I have a 35 year old son, nothing gives me more pleasure than seeing him wear the watch I gave him years ago, both of you have young sons, you have many joyous days to come, giving them your watch will be one of the high lights.
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11 October 2011, 07:54 AM | #69 |
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I don't get it. Why are the superior benefits of Apple so hard to explain?
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So it's not the steam that causes the failure, but it's water that you notice in the watch after a shower that could lead you to believe the steam damaged the seal, but it's just the unfortunate result of an unserviced mechanical beast. |
11 October 2011, 09:53 PM | #70 | |
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You can show them a $999 Macbook Air and a plastic $999 Dell and they'll say "See, Macs are more expensive. People are paying for the name." "But... but... they cost the SAME! And with the Dell you have to use Windows, that's worth $100 at least to avoid! And there's a $500 resale differential in twelve months!". The response will be a smug "You're overpaying because you are stupid. Plus I heard back in the 90's there wasn't a right click." That's an unwinnable argument. |
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11 October 2011, 10:01 PM | #71 |
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To me, I don't get why Apple is perceived to be superior to other brands. I use Apple products and I really don't see what the fuss is about vs. other products. Their customer service is similar to other products I deal with, maybe the only difference is that they now have stores so you can deal with them physically. As for quality, it is also similar to other products in the same price range.
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11 October 2011, 10:54 PM | #72 | |
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11 October 2011, 11:03 PM | #73 |
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I know a couple who both have iphone4's. They are eligible for upgrade on November 10th. So if they get 64Gig iphone4s' on release date, they pay something like $800. If they wait a month they get them for $399.
Guess when they are getting their iphones. |
11 October 2011, 11:12 PM | #74 | |
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11 October 2011, 11:13 PM | #75 | |
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11 October 2011, 11:25 PM | #76 |
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2 types of people, those that have used and now own an apple computer
and those that have no idea how an actual computer should operate. there is just no comparison. none! thank you Steve Jobs.
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11 October 2011, 11:33 PM | #77 | |
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if you can think it, it has been thunk before and is ready to be done, just find the correct command ... this gets easier after you've been debriefed from windows barbed wire OS. apple is simpler, the process is often actually pt A to pt B vs the other OS which may entail so much more processing (which has been hidden pretty well over the years, but it takes more effort and slows things down and complicates simple actions to the point of fowling up the simplest process) for me the $$$ of 1 vs the other was never a thought as they are two entirely different products, the term apples and oranges lives here. and in this analogy the orange is a square wheel.
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11 October 2011, 11:53 PM | #78 | |
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have a friend designing shops, interiors. he bought a mac because he had to look trendy and uptodate when going to a presentation at his clients' he likes it and i know that macs are good but this illustrates clearly the "stigma" attached.
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12 October 2011, 12:04 AM | #79 |
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Used to work in IT so to be honest I'm a bit of a computer geek, Apple products are pretty damn awesome and I long abandoned windows however use MS Office Mac Version for my work (which is fantastic)
Everything is so simplified, forgot Viruses existed, no searching for settings thru multiple menus etc it really makes it a pleasure to use. Unfortunately on the odd occasion I have to work on a Windows 7 machine in the office, its weird but I actually dread turning that machine on. Of course visually the product and design is stunning which is prob the first thing you will notice when you buy an Apple product, I guess this is a bit like having a Rolex. My Girlfriend bought me a Macbook Air for my 30th when they first came out many years back now. It was pretty surreal at the time unboxing the worlds thinnest notebook which was a beautiful slab of aluminium compared to my plastic Sony Vaio. Many of my friends think I'm mad buying Apple desktops and laptops instead of a $300 plastic laptop - maybe they are right however I could never go back. Maintenance free and a joy to use. If I was a casual web surfer then maybe a PC would be the way, I would never recommend an Apple computer to the casual Facebook / eBayer etc however I spend half my life in front of a computer so I guess it makes sense to buy something good. Oh yeah - the resale value on Macs are pretty damn good!! My old Macbook Air sold for half what was paid for it 3 years after!!! A PC is worthless after a few years!!! Its all personal choice at the end of the day - I suppose its a bit like the Omega V Rolex argument however of course there is a stigma attached to Apple products due to the success. I have quite a few friends who have iPhones who has since bought iMacs, MacBooks etc the Halo effect as such however they all complain when they have to work on PCs in an office!!! |
12 October 2011, 12:14 AM | #80 | |
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This is as close to the truth as you can get. Take the settings of a Mac vs Control Panel of a PC. The amount of bloated crap that you have to click thru to check something out on a Windows machine is pretty unreal and often hidden to the "average" user. Working in IT support for many years the amount of basic troubleshooting tasks I had for users unable to find this or that was ridiculous. With a Mac everything is logical, uncluttered and obvious. Although simplified over the last few years setting up a home network on a Windows machine was not a task for the "normal" user and was one of the common call outs I used to have. |
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12 October 2011, 12:16 AM | #81 |
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12 October 2011, 12:25 AM | #82 |
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12 October 2011, 03:32 AM | #83 | |
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Windows has "Start" on the taskbar. Mac has "Go" in finder. They both have user folders for docs, music, pics, etc. I think dealing with drive mappings is more intuitive in Windows. Just go to where the drives are and select map network drive. In Mac, you go to "Go", then mount drives. I'd rather mount drives the Windows way. Neither one is very intuitive because the average computer (mac or pc) just knows how to start their browser and email. If you want to do any command line stuff it's Dos commands vs unix commands. Nothing intuitive about either one. You can say Mac is more stable, but I just crashed a macbook air about ten minutes ago, whereas I rarely crash a pc. The funny part is when mac users feel like they just discovered something different and new and decide to tell the IT department what they are doing wrong. |
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12 October 2011, 07:01 AM | #84 | ||
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Condescending mockery will usually silence them for a while. |
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12 October 2011, 07:05 AM | #85 |
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"The most dangerous thing to any society, in any part of the world, is Fanaticism."
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12 October 2011, 08:41 AM | #86 |
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Thanks for some specific answers, guys.
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So it's not the steam that causes the failure, but it's water that you notice in the watch after a shower that could lead you to believe the steam damaged the seal, but it's just the unfortunate result of an unserviced mechanical beast. |
12 October 2011, 10:38 AM | #87 | |
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But for simple to intermediate stuff, Office for Mac is fine. |
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13 October 2011, 01:04 AM | #88 | |
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But I though macs don't crash or get viruses. That was almost my username here on TRF. I'm still waiting to hear how your company of 500 computer experts will get their Macs on the network at their new HQ. |
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13 October 2011, 02:35 AM | #89 | |
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You can either write your own examples of logical unix and illogical DOS commands, or you won't comprehend mine. So what does it matter? You've used both and you immediately know what I mean, or we'd be starting at "ls -l | grep root | more" and there are better tutors than me!!! No one said Macs don't crash or get viruses, although as you know both are FAR less frequent on Macs, to the point that almost no Mac user runs AV as the benefit doesn't outweigh the performance hit. But you know that. You have 500 computer experts that can't plug in a CAT6 cable? Bigger problem than I can handle. As you know, there is no connectivity challenge. And of course while I hope you do get to delegate assignments to the CFO someday, today ain't the day if I'm involved :) If I were a plumber, I would DESPISE the new "PEX" products. They just work. Run the red and blue pipes, install the fittings, and ignore it for 100 years. As a plumber, I'd be tempted to bad-mouth that stuff like no tomorrow. Copper and PVC is where it is at. Gotta have something familiar and trusted that requires LOTS of plumbing service. We've created an IT priesthood of plumber-level skills that once commanded premium salaries by withholding information from users. You've made no secret of your contempt for your users, and your opinion of their efforts to be self-sufficient. I understand. With PEX they don't need plumbers. But you knew this. |
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13 October 2011, 03:53 AM | #90 | |
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So let's continue finding out what you don't know. It's not plugging in that's a challenge. What I don't get is what happens when the users plug in their cat 6 cables. Is there something in the walls that somehow gets data to and from your SaaS companies who are going to do everything for you? Is everyone on a Linksys or something? Who designed the structured cabling? Who configured the lan switches, routers and firewalls? What happens when the internet goes down? What happens when Fritz in the marketing department buys a macbook air with no ethernet port? Who set up the wireless infrastructure? I'm sure you did great with your Airport Extreme, but a campus wifi implementation where you can roam without dropping packets is a little more complex. I've yet to find a single accountant capable of configuring BGP. Do you have an email infrastructure or are you going with a hosted solution? 500 people connected to hosted email, ERP, CRM use a lot of bandwidth. How are users authenticating to shared network resources? How are they authenticating to your SaaS providers, for that matter. Most SaaS vendors use Secure LDAP to authenticate the customer, but do you have anyone capable of setting up directory services? If there are branches or stores, who set up your WAN? Who manages point of sale? Remember, this is an IT-free company, so you can't even outsource the network engineering or DBA talent. Teksystems or whoever will just come in and mock you condescendingly, while charging double what you would pay for in-house IT. I've actually done this project, but on a larger scale (a large retailer sold off from a ginormous retailer), so I'm not cheating by asking you how to do it. I just want to know if you actually do know it all. |
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