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Mac v pc
I have not tried a Mac yet myself, because of the prices. I have had the same desktop PC for over 15 years now and it still does the job for me. I have had issues with it over the years, but repairs are reasonable for the most part. I had one hard drive die on me, but I had a RAID system set up so the second HD was just fine, and the rest were virus issues of one kind or another. If you have a good PC guy to rely on they can fix just about anything. More often then not failures are ususally due to opening up stuff that one should know not to. One of our sons had to use my PC for a school project last week and got a virus from going into U-tube videos. We had taken his laptop, I-touch, and PSP away from him for having two "F" grades. So I let him use mine for an hour or so. I took it into my friends shop and he had it back to me the next day without any problems. It cost me $25 and I have never lost any data. We also have 5 laptops in our family and another desktop that is about 7 years old. Sure we have had issues from time to time, but overall if you take care of your computer needs as far as protection they will last as long as you want them to.
I use Symantic anti virus, and a registry optomizer to keep things clean. As long as you do updates periodically and schedule scans once a week or so everything stays operational. Its really about keeping good habits and staying out of places that everyone knows are full of bad crap that can mess your system up. There are problems with everything at one time or another. I do have to admit that some of the Mac based computers are pretty impressive if you want to pay that much for a PC, but up to now I just could not justiry it. |
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I had a p4 comp for a little while, but soon replaced that one with a C2D/socket 775 board in 2005. The S775 processors are just now really being phased out, so I may hold on a bit and pick up a quad core for cheap and just run that for a several more years. I don't game anymore, so the most intensive thing I need it for is occasional vid editing. Getting 7-8yrs out of a comp and staying relatively state of the art the whole time is awesome. I always bought inexpensive but quality components, and rarely ever had issues. Still have and use older Hdds and dvd drives that have moved from one comp to the next. The 10yo black Chieftec case I have still looks sweet. Lost lots of usb and firewire cards to static tho... I doubt I've spent $1500 on comp parts in the last 10 yrs. |
You will burn in cyber space for defecting to the company with the halve eaten apple logo:diablo::lol:
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I've still an intel fanboy using an AMD CPU.. I need Intel to go onto a sale! :party: |
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Old dog
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A 2.6 to 3.2 Ghz quad core(preferably Intel). At least 8 Gigs up to 16gigs of Ramm DDR3 would be good. A fairly good video card (gamer quality is a plus). A motherboard that has plenty of USB ports and leaves room for expasion A 5.1 or better sound card. A mini tower that does not weigh 100lbs loaded up. A 650W power supply or better. A teribite of hard drive space. A desent(fast) DVD burner. And something that looks up to par style wise. Personally I still like HP because of their customer support and because I can get just about all of this for approx $600 through the base exhange. Most of the electronics we have are HP. We have Dell, Toshiba, Sony, as well, but THeir customer support sucks. I hate propietory crap. The 15 year old PC I use now is a custom built machine that I came up with myself while learning the PC technical side back in 1994. It is a simple Athalon 1.6ghz porcessor. Nothing fancy in todays market, but it was pretty good back in 1994. It still runs along just fine, but something is wrong with the motherboard and only one of the DDR slots is working right now, which really limits my memory speed(1 gig). So yes it is time to move up. Luckily for me I have a few friends to lean on who really know the PC world inside and out. I do my research and call on them for advice, and yes assistance when needed. Still it is not hard to learn new things on your own. I started by buying one of those "Build your own super computer" books and went from there. |
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I bought my very first iPod, the 5.5G iPod Video, a month or two later the iPod Classic came out, boy was I pissed, 50 more GB for the same price? Yes, I actually use 30GB.. I STILL use it every day (when I go running, boy is it heavy now compared to the iPod Touch), I switched out the battery, which is quite easy to do btw, I'd recommend you do it if you need to.. And the iPod touch I now have, has left me happy! One day on a Pupil-Free Day (noschool!) my hard drive decided to explode on me, literally, no way was it coming back, if it weren't for my iPod, I would've gone insane, I was on my iPod Touch day and night! Talking to friends via AIM, and even on RC-Monster! My English teacher told me a funny story the other day, she's kinda mad at Apple, even though I guess you could consider her a diehard Apple fan. Her very first laptop (A PowerBook G3 or G4 I believe), oldest of the old, she dropped it at least 20 times in class (once in my period! Smack down on the screen and hard drive), and it still works perfect. The other day she dropped her newer Macbook Pro on her bed and it went poofed. Hard drive was corrupted. She was furious because all our essays were saved on there :lol: Needless to say I got an A.. :whistle: Then she saw the "iPad" and thought it was a joke, an oversized iPhone without the phone! Threadjack over. |
Apple's battery policies are jacked up. Why can't they just just make a battery door, like every other electronic device made?
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http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2361358,00.asp Is it threadjacking when a thread is dead? Maybe just necrophilia? :lol: |
Well if you happen to have a apple store nearby I'm pretty sure that they can and will replace the battery. However I'm not sure about the rest of you but I have no problem receiving a refurbished product. Often a refurbished one is better than original as any known issues with the original have been fixed (ex. a bad run of a certain chip or some other component it would be replaced) and they generally have a warranty on them. If I brought my iphone in for a battery replacement after 11 months and the it has all kinds of scratches all over it and I get a new one that I simply have to plug into my computer and all my if will be on it in 5 minutes I have no problem with that. In my experience Apple has stood behind there products much the same as Castle stands behind there's. I had a set of earphones that started sounding crackly, brought them in and they gave me a new set. After 10-11 months and many drops to the ground my original iphone's ear speaker wasn't loud enough for me to hear on anymore, brought it into the store and walked out 10 minutes later with a brand new one. I still say I didn't have any problems with my apple products because they where immediately taken care of free of charge. The battery on the matchbooks is replaceable, they sell them right in the store, sure they aren't as easy to replace as on other laptops but for something that doesn't have to be done very often it's not a big deal to have to take out a few screws.
I have had my Macbook pro for just over a week now, no complaints. Yes there are somethings I have to figure out as there are differences between a Mac and a PC but it's not hard to figure them out and if you can't then call apple and they will tell you! |
Hmm, my cousins MacBook (Not pro I don't think), has a detachable battery... and battery door, turn the coin slot, and out it pops..
I've heard MANY success stories with Apple and their replacements, I gave a iPod Data Cable to a friend last week, he brought it in and gave me a new one (the old one stopped working all of a sudden, it was over 4 years old, easily). He's done the same with my iPod headphones (that I got second hand!), needless to say, their customer service is definitely not A+, it's OVER A+. |
Hmmm weird about the macbook pro, IDK what they are talking about.
Looking at the apple site, they do say this about the iphone (and ipad), which seems to correlate to the story in Pc Mag: Quote:
IDK, but it would creep me out a bit to get someone else's phone/max-ipad. What if the guy used it just sitting on the crapper & browsing adult sites? Eww... Not enough bleach in the world to get that clean.:lol: Rather just order a cheap batt myself and just pop it in. No worries about losing data or anything either. |
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Tis all. But I know what you mean. God forbid if you get Harold's or Linc's stuff.. Oh lordy. |
All in all
All in all this whole idea of proprietary crap sucks if you ask me. I love the fact that most things use rechargable batteries like AA's & AAA's so you can just have a load of energizer batteries in the charger ready to go. Having products that use only the manufacturers brand is a bunch of Sh#$^ if you ask me. They are one of the richest companies in the world and still they are worried about after market products taking money out of their pockets. Life is too short to have to deal with that kind of stuff. We already have enough to worry about these days without more censorship type stuff.
I think that Mac stuff is pretty cool, but I am not willing to pay extra just to be a part of their club. |
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[opens box] *sniff sniff* "What is that smell? Its... musky.." lol |
What a vision that is.
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