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50 Reasons to Switch From Mac to PC

A few days ago Chris Pirillo compiled a list of 50 Reasons to Switch from PC to Mac. After discussing the topic with him, he informed me no one took up his challenge and he was looking for someone to do it. Well, I decided I’d give it a shot. I came up the following list, I did my best to make the reasons as “real” as possible. Let me know what you think – I’m interested! Leave a comment. Oh, by the way, I’m not a Windows fan boy, nor am I an Apple hater. I use both platforms on a daily basis. This list is just a compilation of reasons I have not made the full switch yet to Mac. Well, without further ado, I present the list:

Edit: I should note the list is not in order of importance, it is simply just a collaboration of ideas.

50 Reasons to Switch From Mac to PC

1. Windows is currently the dominant gaming platform; this of course, is a no-brainer. Most games developed today are developed with Windows users in mind. I am not saying there are no games for the Mac; However, I am saying the majority of gaming is done on the PC platform.

2. Ever heard of building your own Mac? Not really, this is because Apple strictly controls what hardware is used in their machines, it is not an ‘Apple’ if it wasn’t built by Apple. Homegrown PCs that run Mac OS are strictly against the License Agreement.

3. Purchasing RAM from the manufacturer is reasonably priced. Apple over charges for RAM, they have been doing it forever. You are better off buying RAM from 3rd party company such as, Crucial.com. Whereas, on the PC side of things you do not have to buy RAM from a 3rd party company when you purchase your computer in order to save some money.

4. Free software is definitely more plentiful on the Windows side of the fence. While there are a number of free OSX applications, the ones that are decent usually require some kind of fee. However, I must admit there is a large development of applications for OSX starting to take off.

5. Upgradeability. PC’s are far more upgradeable than Mac’s. In order to have anywhere near the freedom in terms of upgrades on a Mac you essentially are required to buy a Mac Pro.

6. Windows is the Operating System for the masses, sure you can switch to Mac OSX, but why do you think Apple created Boot Camp? So you could use Windows. Obviously Apple knows that Windows isn’t going away, nor do they think they will be over taking the Windows Operating System (any time soon). If you are buying a Mac for School, remember that much of the software and technical support provided by colleges is geared towards Windows, so even if you buy a mac, you might end up having to pay for a copy of Windows to use via Boot Camp.

7. PC’s can perform a lot of the same tasks Mac’s take the credit for such as, video editing, photo editing, audio editing, etc. There are a number of excellent applications for Windows that do those same exact tasks. There is Sony Vegas for video editing, ACID and Sound Forge for audio editing, and there is Photoshop on the PC as well.

8. Microsoft Office. Microsoft Office is the premier office suite as of today, businesses use it, students use it, and just every day people use it. While there is a version of it for Mac OSX it does not stack up against the Windows version.

9. Most software is released first for Windows. Ever notice that when new software comes out or new services, the Windows versions are released and a few months after, the OSX versions are then released?

10. Mac OSX isn’t the only operating system with widgets. Vista has the sidebar which has a number of functional and useful gadgets.

11. Vista has an integrated CD/DVD burning system that works just as well as Disk Copy on OSX and it is integrated within folders, so a simple click can burn an entire folder to a disk.

12. Firefox loads and runs much faster on a PC it seems than on Mac OSX. However, this seems to apply for most applications that are cross-platform.

13. Audio and video codec support – it is definitely much easier to play certain video files on Windows than it is on Mac OSX.

14. Going back a bit to software selection, one of the best audio players (if not the best) for the computer is Windows only – foobar2000.

15. Now you can run Linux within Windows using a new Linux distribution called andLinux. By within Windows, I do not mean virtual machine, I’m talking within the actual Windows operating system.

16. There are far more Windows based communities on the web where you can give and receive tech help.

17. The XBOX 360 integrates seamlessly with Windows Vista. I don’t see that at all on the Mac.

18. Microsoft patches security holes fast. There are certain exceptions; however, for the most part Microsoft stays on top of the game when it comes to providing security patches.

19. On Windows you can easily reassign system folders to different drives such as, My Music, My Documents, My Videos, etc with a simple right-click and edit of the path. I have yet to find a way to do that with ease on OSX.

20. On Windows clicking the X actually means you’re closing the application (with a few exceptions). No need to worry about it still running after you click X, I still do not understand why this isn’t the case on OSX. Granted it’s not actually the OS itself, just the way the application works, it seems to be more common of an issue on OSX. Is it too much to expect that when I click X it terminates and closes the application?

21. Going back to getting support, it is much easier to find a computer technician who is Microsoft certified than is Apple certified. I would have to say this is a definite plus for new computer users.

22. The Microsoft Knowledge Base is an excellent source of information. It is very informative and resolves a number of Windows problems from common to not so common.

23. Active X controls aren’t always bad. While they are commonly associated with malware, they do have a lot of use in the corporate world.

24. Windows’ built-in FTP is much nicer than OSX’s in terms of ease-of-use and accessibility through Explorer. Granted there are definitely better 3rd party software applications out there, in terms of comparing this particular feature in both operating systems, Windows has it right.

25. Exchange servers for Email. In a business environment Exchange is the way to go – hands down. It is leaps and bounds ahead of Leopard’s SquirrelMail. Plus you have Outlook Web Access which is just phenomenal.

26. Window management. Windows in my opinion does a better job at managing the windows you have open on your desktop. They sit in your taskbar or system tray and are easily accessible when you need them.

27. Ctrl + Alt + Del – easy to find and press on a keyboard. In Mac OSX the Force Quit key combination is just strange. If I was not familiar with a Mac keyboard I would have no clue what to press.

28. Add/Remove Programs – simple, easy to use, point and click uninstall process. I’m aware that on a Mac most applications can be removed by just deleting them from the applications folder. However, some put files in the Library which are not removed if you delete them that why. Is it just me or is it weird you need to download a 3rd party application such as AppDelete or AppZapper to make sure you completely remove software from your Mac?

29. Hardware customizations – PC’s are definitely easier to customize in terms of what hardware you can use with them. On the Mac if Apple doesn’t support it, you’re essentially screwed driver/support wise.

30. The dock may look nice, but it is a poor alternative to the task bar. I always thought it looked excellent, until I had first hand experience with it and realized the way it handles applications in terms of on the desktop itself is rather obscure. It just seems all over the place and potentially distracting – it doesn’t sit on your desktop nearly as nicely as the task bar. Not to mention, ever move something off the Dock? What happens? It goes *poof* – not cool.

31. Microsoft Keyboards and Mice are excellent in my opinion so why not use them to their full potential? If you use Windows you can activate all of the features of the keyboard and mouse. On Mac OSX you cannot due to the software not working on the OSX platform.

32. PC selling companies such as Dell offer to come install your new computer for you, for a brand new computer user this is great. I haven’t seen that offered by Apple.

33. Uh… hello. Where’s my right-click? Why can’t Apple provide me with a mouse that has a right-click by default?

34. The Genius Bar… Well, it is really not so genius in my experience. They’re not that good. I realize this may vary depending on location and who you get, but I went twice and I wasn’t too impressed with their knowledge and support.

35. People say Windows is more susceptible to malware, viruses, and Trojans, well, it may be compared to OSX, but it sure doesn’t mean just because you run Windows you are going to get infected. This goes with any operating system though, each has vulnerabilities. So surf safe, don’t install random applications, and I guarantee you’ll be infection free without an Anti-virus or anti-malware application.

36. You have an iPod or an iPhone, guess what no problem. They work on Windows too!

37. Leopard’s Finder gives me fits when I try and search a network computer. It works sometimes, but mostly it doesn’t. Windows XP and Vista both have no issues picking up each other across the network.

38. Why do I have to customize the Finder toolbar to have it show the Path I’m currently at? And even then, it still doesn’t display it unless I click the button. Windows seems to have the Address bar by default and will always show you your current Path.

39. Call me crazy here, but in order to have access to Back to My Mac, you need to buy .Mac? Isn’t Remote Desktop free on Windows?

40. People always say – “well, OSX is based off UNIX, so you get the UNIX system under the hood” My response generally consists of “Well, great. Chances are most users will not even be using that portion of OSX.” So I like to cross that “benefit” off the list.

41. Windows Media Center – I haven’t seen anything like that on OSX (at least that is comparable). iTunes is nice, but it is not the same. Windows Media Center is just perfect for parties or just browsing your music and videos.

42. Apple is essentially an electronics company today. They are no longer Apple Computer. They are Apple, Inc. If that doesn’t tell you something about their motives for the future I don’t know what does. Microsoft has been sticking to the software side of things since they were started. Of course, they have spread out a bit in terms of XBOX and some computer peripherals, but their main focus is and always has been software. I see dedication when I look at that. Apple well, I’m not really sure what they will be doing in 10-15 years from now.

43. Steve Jobs will not be around forever. I don’t know who will replace him and when that time comes will they be able to keep up the good work?

44. Context menus – This is something I’ve only really seen in Windows. I can add context menus, edit them, etc. On OSX, I don’t see that ability so much.

45. Inconsistent updates on OSX, I don’t know about you guys, but I like my regularly scheduled updates. Makes things simple, gets you into a habit.

46. Backup. Sure OSX has Time Machine which is nice, but up until Time Capsule was released and I’m sure not sure of this as I haven’t used Time Capsule, I have not found a way to use Time Machine with a network drive. On Windows my network drive is found and connected no issues and I can backup my data easily with the Backup Files Wizard on Vista. Time Machine is nice, but in reality here, you really don’t need to back up EVERYTHING. Just your data files should suffice for most people. However, in Vista Ultimate the Backup Files Wizard will allow you to backup EVERYTHING if you so desire.

47. Windows Vista ReadyBoost, I haven’t seen anything like that on OSX. Granted the technology is not there yet, but the theory behind it intrigues me.

48. A small but handy feature in Windows Vista – check boxes for when you’re selecting files. How many times have you been in the process of selecting a number of files and you accidentally forgot to hold down Ctrl and everything was suddenly deselected? The check boxes feature allows you to tick files/folders so that doesn’t happen anymore. Where is this feature on OSX?

49. The Windows Event Viewer. Ever start troubleshooting a problem and end up checking the Event Viewer for answers? I have. On OSX, sure you have the Console which logs stuff, but I haven’t found anything comparable to the Windows Event Viewer which is a beyond useful troubleshooting tool.

50. Alright, here we are #50. Last one. So where’s my Print Screen key so I can capture this accomplishment? Oh yeah, I need to open Grab or something on OSX. I don’t really like that.

I would like to thank Chris Pirillo for presenting me with this challenge, Allan Jude for re-wording a few things, and Mandy for proof reading.

For those who do not read all of the comments:

If you are curious as to how I really feel, you should read this new post:

Apple vs OEM – Follow Up to Mac to PC Switch

As I state in the post, it was not easy, nor do I feel they are all excellent reasons. However, the point of the list was to attempt to compile something rather than nothing at all; while I agree it would have better as a shorter list with only the best reasons, Chris was looking for 50. I’d be curious to see if anyone could come up with additional/new reasons. If you can feel free to post them.

By the way, the post did exactly what I had intended it to do.

— Jeff Weisbein

Jeff is the founder & CEO of BestTechie. He has over 10 years of experience working with technology and building businesses. He loves to travel and listen to music.

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  • PhillyTom


    After nearly 20 years on a mac, I’ve switched to PC.

    Macs are too damn expensive.
    I can do everything I did on a Mac on a PC.
    I like the idea of reverse-snobism.

    After all…it’s only a computer. I don’t need fastest, coolest, hippest, whitest, biggest. I just need something that does a reliable job of…computing.

    Mac’s got a superior ad campaign…I’ll give ‘em that. But for me, once the ad is over, a computer is a computer. Pick one that fits my needs, don’t overspend, and enjoy the work it does.

  • http://developer.apple.com/opensource/tools/X11.html Jerry A. Trick


    4. Free software is definitely more plentiful on the Windows side of the fence. While there are a number of free OS X applications, the ones that are decent usually require some kind of fee. However, I must admit there is a large development of applications for OSX starting to take off.

    There is X11 which will allow you to run unix based software natively. This is included in OS X.

    http://developer.apple.com/opensource/tools/X11.html

    “X11 for Mac OS X is an implementation of the X Window System that makes it possible to run X11-based applications in Mac OS X. Based on the X.org Foundation releases — the leading reference implementation of X11 — X11 for Mac OS X is compatible, fast, and fully integrated with Mac OS X. It features includes full X11R7 compatibility including an X window server, Quartz window manager, libraries, and basic utilities such as xterm. It is optional but installed by default on Mac OS X v10.5 Leopard. The X11 SDK headers are available as part of the Xcode Developer Tools.”

  • Spuffler


    I will stay with Linux on generic X86.

    I have all the widgets I need, I have the games I want, I have the office suite I prefer, I have all I need regarding wants.

    Next, I have the ability to use generic x86 hardware and 90% of the time, it works without extra fidgeting, without junkware being installed alongside any necessary ‘drivers’, without the need for an Apple logo. I don’t have to pay $80 for a mouse, I’m using a $18 trackball, have used the same $9 mouse for years on another Linux box.

    I do not need nor want to upgrade every 3 months, so I can still perform the tasks I need by retaining the services of a Pentium 3. Those people that feel they need to use Silverlight alongside Flash and 3 versions of Java are not who I am.

  • connor


    How do I switch from a mac to a pc?

  • basst


    You sound like you’ve always wanted a Mac but never could…except the 1st one this list bs, all those things you’ve said you cant do on a mac made me laugh…

  • Ob


    agreed man, I’ve used both for a long time and am thinking of switching back to get a more powerful/capable system for less money. it’s sad how some people are responding so negatively.

    Also on 40, mac runs on unix subsystem, but don’t think you’ll be able to use it just like a *nix box as it uses darwin binaries so a lot of linux stuff you just won’t be able to install.

  • Kiki


    @cucu
    > Apple users are 99% fanboys with more money than brains :)

    In a sense, it might sounds true (with brain). I find using Apple is sooo easy that it makes me feel like I need no brain to utilize it. But of course, just like every person, I need to be creative in order to produce something, but that doesn’t related to what computer or OS do you use.

    Joey Says:
> If you’re a competent user, you’ll have no trouble with malware or spyware. My XP machine has always run great and has never crashed or BSOD’d.

    This my big problem if I buy Windows-based-machine. I use computer for specific purpose. I’m not an IT guy who easily deals with antimalware, spyware, antivirus or so. So my opinion is, to use Windows computer safely, I have to be a competent Windows user, which I am not.

    Matt Sherif Says:
    > Nicely done, did you mention that the administrator account is WAY easier to use in Windows than in Mac?

    Well, it just your opinion. But, a disaster with administrator account in Windows was one of my friend’s reasons to switch to PC. Because she lost her data then.
    Another friend of mine, used MsWord to wrote her thesis (back in 1996). She kept losing her image and no explanation why did that happened.
    Another guy, used ArchiCAD and lost his column or pillar he put in his architectural design, still with any logical explanation.
    Both faulties in Word or AcrhiCAD, simply never happened in a Mac.

    tractordriver88 Says:
    > The Eject buttons on external CD and DVD drives do not work. You must eject from the finder

    Not true. I have my PowerBook here, and the eject button work fine, no need to eject it from finder.

  • rsvr85


    @ALL THE PEOPLE WHO SAY THE LIST IS LAME, I DON’T SEE A BETTER LIST COMING FROM YOU!!

    I bought my first PC about 1 year ago and after much messing around wth a 24″ G5 and a HP Touchsmart (approx. 3hrs each!) i finally settled for the HP (Vista Premium), i just find it so much easier to use than the Mac, the touchscreen works seamlessly with Vista, and the HP was £750 less!!!!
    I’ve had no probs setting up my home network; video, audio and picture editing is a sinch, and as for malicious infections; i’ve had one, this was a schoolboy error on my behalf, and it was hardly a problem anyways, utilizing the backup and restore center made it a 30 min inconvenience.
    One more point, how can Apple Inc. and Apple users justify selling/buying at the skyhigh prices, what can a Mac do that a PC can’t??
    CASE CLOSED!!

  • http://www.e-paca.com Ron


    Okay, here are a couple:

    1) The Mac has a delete key, but it’s not truth in advertising – it’s actually a backspace key! My PC has a Backspace key AND a Delete key, and they work as advertised.

    2) It’s a fallacy that Macs never crash. My MacBook Pro crashes occasionally, and suffers from many of the same maladies as my PC.

    3) I can’t play .wmv files (arguably one of the more common video file types in use on the web) on the Mac without downloading VLC or some other alternative media player. I can do this on my PC. If I download an additional codec on Windows, I CAN play .mov files from within Windows Media Player.

    4) Mac has no tablet pc functionality available. E-ink is very useful and very cool to use in such programs as One Note or the free Journal.

    5) Fingerprint scanners for biometric login are something I haven’t seen on a Mac. Admittedly not perfect (newsflash: neither are passwords), they offer an easier alternative to remembering (or worse yet, having to store in a password file) all those different passwords for different sites, etc. Fingerprint scanners are becoming almost ubiquitous on PC laptops.

    I own and enjoy using a 15″ Macbook Pro. After making the switch almost a year ago, I’ve found that I spend most of my time using Windows via Parallels, and for the most part, use only Firefox on the Mac side. I hate Safari, and while I found many of the other apps fun and interesting, after many months of trying to find reasons to use them, I just haven’t really identified any compelling reasons to do so. I’m in the process of switching back. I’ll probably always keep a Mac around, but I doubt it’ll ever become my primary computer.

  • Bryant


    I’m currently switching from my Apple to a PC laptop, what brand would be best within around $350

  • walter


    I use a pc, but I use Linux (Ubuntu 8.10). Didn’t apple dumb down BSD for OSX? Maybe MS should consider that too. Imagine – no more viruses and trojans.

  • ThinkLady


    as a writer, artist, photographer, have used both OS and prefer PC — both have uses, pros, cons — but prefer the PC for getting loads of work accomplished.

  • A J


    Mac user right now on Intel iMac and running Vista Ultimate x64, I have not used Leopard for 3 months now. I am definitely buying a PC and stop this nonsense with Apple and Macs being so far behind when it comes to processors. The only quads are MacPros, way too expensive. I can buy a PC with dual quad processors and monitors and still pay less. It is ridiculous.

  • Reuben


    I’m switching from mac to PC because I can get so much more power for less cash.

    But I’m still going to miss my mac big time.

    In fact, I read this list to feel better but it didn’t help much.

  • http://www.intic.de/ Paddy


    My main reason to switch back to PC was the poor hardware quality that my MacBook had. I got a replacement display that had the worst image quality I have ever seen in my life. Apple’s reply to my complain: “MacBooks are not meant to be used with image processing software like Photoshop. Just get a MacBook Pro instead”
    All in all I had my Macbook repaired 6 times so far and the general quality of service was always below the level that one might expect from a “premium” company like Apple.
    I decided to switch to a Dell Notebook now. Mainly because they have really good displays and good service.

  • Gary


    my family was a mix of 2 macbooks and 3 acer laptops running vista. we noticed that the pc’s were getting more use because of the variety of programs, vista seemed easier to use, and the equivalent mac versions of programs just did not work as well as windows version ..ie microsoft office etc.. then we started having problems with one of the macs,it would appear to freeze and go to sleep on its own, the guys at the apple store never did really explain what they did to…kinda…fix that, happens less often now anyway, then couple months later the hard drive had to be replaced. the second mac the screen started to flicker and then go black from time to time then just quit, so made another trip to the apple store and told them what it was doing and without looking at it he said, gonna cost ya $700 to fix, why not just upgrade to a macbook pro? so now we have 4 acers running vista home premium, 1 twice repaired and works most of the time mac, and 1 white paper weight.

  • Anonymous
  • Anonymous


    Not impressed. Many of those are personnal preferences*, repetition of the same things*, ignorance of how to use a Mac *** or simply mention that a PC “can do that too”. And I’m saying as the owner and user of BOTH Mac and PC computers.
    You’ll have to work harder if you want to convince me too.

    * I’m quite happy that iTunes don’t quit when I click the X button so I can continue listening to music without the control window. Use cmd+Q to quit quickly.
    ** OMG more softwares on windows!!!!111!one! Quality before quantity, friend.
    *** # 50 just to mention this one: cmd+shift+3 for a full screen capture or cmd+shift+4 for only a section. My Windows computer tech boyfriend was quite jealous of the last one.

  • Anonymous


    #46
    One thing you have to admit that Mac has which we Windows users don’t is Apple Time Machine. To be honest, that alone makes me want to switch to Mac. HOWEVER, this is no longer the case. For all us Windows Users looking for a Windows version of Time Machine, there’s now Genie Timeline. A new backup utility by the makers of Genie Backup Manager (also a great backup tool) at Genie-soft.
    Genie Timeline is an amazing replica to Macs time machine and follows the set it and forget it concept. However, with Genie Timeline you can choose to backup to any external media unlike Mac thats only for time capsule.
    Now youve got yourself another great reason to Switch to PC! :)

  • http://www.facebook.com/dragonitejc John ‘Andrew’ Carter


    Well, my friend, YOU ARE AN IDIOT.

  • http://www.hernanjc.com/ Hernan J. Colon


    *drumroll* …and the result of the challenge is: You fail miserably!!! Biggest piece of crap list I’ve ever seen!

  • willie wonka


    After 20 years of using Macs, I recently switched from Mac to PC because I coulnd’t find an _affordable_ Mac that did what I want. I wanted a tablet PC, and, unfortuantely, Apple hasn’t made one yet, although one is rumored. Furthermore, I wante something that was affordable; so I bought a $400 tablet PC that so far does everything I wanted it to do. I do miss the Mac interface; I wish Apple would license its OS to 3rd parties or I wish I could get my PC to run MacOSX.

  • BlackTenshi


    Well, my own personal experience: I first saw a mac at a friend’s home, his family had this small printing plant, and a mac had been adopted to do homework and such. When we had to make a report complete with a presentation, using graphics and images, we couldn’t do it on it, we couldn’t find how to… We went to another friend’s home to use Win 98 SE (don’t remember the mac version, sorry).

    Then, at the graphic design school, in the library they had this mac, still a cream gray-ish square box thing, that was too difficult to use, I don’t know about the version of the OS, but I remember someone had been playing with it and left it all clustered and ugly. You just couldn’t search the web comfortably.

    Then, at work, in the department of Design and Prepress for a medium-size printing plant, we had 2 main computers, a PC with Win XP Pro SP2, and an eMac with OS X 10.3.9, everyone wanted to use the PC, perhaps because of Win being more familiar to all of us. Despite my previous experiences with mac, I decided I would work on the eMac… And that’s when it all started…

    I really don’t understand how so many people are out there defending it as perfect and claiming that “it just works!!”, I have had only not-so-pleasant to really-extremely-frustrating-bad experiences with it.

    First of all, in this place, in this media, there are still a whole lot of people that uses Corel Draw when creating vector graphics or layouts… And in order to work with them on the mac I had to ask my fellow designer to convert it from Corel X4 or X3 to Corel 11, because that’s what the mac have (there are no more versions of this software, as I understand).

    Then, the programs closing by themselves without any warning… I got to really hate that little windows that the mac showed every time my work suddenly disappeared, asking me if I wanted to send to apple the description of what I was doing. It happened so often that sometimes, I just lost it and, enraged, sent a lot of insults and bad words in the message to apple.

    Also, the slowing, oh my… When opening a large and complicated AI file, or converting a PDF into TIFF, or copying a large amount of files, the system would slow down soooo bad… and remained in slow motion EVEN LONG AFTER the task was completed, to the point that the interface of the OS didn’t quite recognized my mouse input, causing that whenever I tried to switch to another program the icon got dragged off from the dock and *poof*… I had to wait several minutes until the system got back being at its usual speed…

    Speaking of performance, it seems that you can’t “punish” a mac as much as you can do it to a PC… I remember trying to solve this issue about speed and performance and one of the Google results led me to this article or thread saying that for the SO I had, with the hard drive I had, there had to be at least 20 GB of free space in order for OS X to run fine… I remember the PC having less than 5 GB of free disk space and Win still running pretty well…

    Lastly, that dreaded, hated, feared Black Screen of Death (just to call it something) with this message in all those languages saying me that the system just couldn’t resist more and the mac had to be shut down… With no possible way of getting out of there and reset being the only solution…

    So, yes, same problems in the operating systems, closing programs, slow performance, blue and black screens of death… And still I would have preferred to work with Win XP every time I could.

    On a side note: I’ve always liked it how with a PC you can build your machine from zero using the pieces you want, if you know how. I was always amazed as how with Linux, after you build up your machine as you want from zero, you can configure almost every aspect on how the system runs, if you know how to… With mac, it seems like a little less freedom, but it’s ok if you are an average user I guess. Linux would be that monster car a mechanic would be working on, Windows would be that tuned up car you drive, and mac would be a (nice looking, perhaps) car with little side wheels attached to the sides… And the prettyness of the macs don’t work for me, after all, I see them as tools… And if I were a carpenter, I wouldn’t have my hammer and saw all decorated and polished as my priority.

    Regards

  • Baris


    I’m using both on the same machine. Windows for gaming and Mac OS for everything else. No need to switch :)

  • http://draconiansam.wordpress.com/category/computer/ sorlag