Part of that problem stems from the fact that most Mac users use their Macs like they always have and are unaware of the vast number of new technologies that Apple acquired when they bought NeXT (technologies Sun Microsystems was working to integrate into their OS before Apple bought out their partner from under them).
Dennis you don't like 'em. Keep away from 'em.
#4. Apple Versus The First Amendment
In order to have access to stuff inside Apple, you have to sign an NDA. You are legally bound by that agreement, and Apple can (and has) used any and all methods at their disposal to find out who is the leak when information gets out.
I, personally, don't ask my friends at Apple anything about what they are working on. If I am told anything, I don't repeat it to anyone else. I've known people inside Apple for nearly 15 years, and it has been the same the whole time... nothing new.
As I recall, Apple's attorneys for these matters are Arent Fox.
Well, from what I hear of Windows 7, I would probably agree with you here. But until Windows 7 came about, I never heard anything but complaints. Most people I know generally despise Vista.It's remarkably easy to avoid using Apple products - you can save a great deal of money with no sacrifice in functionality at all, and in fact widen your choices of software and support in almost every area.
Most people clearly get this - look around at what hardware and operating systems predominate in the real world - why doesn't everybody?
Yet almost every person I've ever talked to who has switched to Mac has vowed never to go back to PC, myself included.
OK, I'll be the contrary opinion. I used Mac. Got annoyed at not being able to play my games. Went to PC and was content. Granted, Mac was less stable back when I used it (OS 7.0, I think). But I used a mac for video editing at school and the program crashed and I lost all my work (after two hours). Now I'm not saying that Mac isn't generally stable. I'm just saying that so is my Vista computer (and everyone I talked to loves Windows 7), so I don't see the point in paying higher prices.
Dennis you don't like 'em. Keep away from 'em.
I do, as do the vast majority of users and computer professionals.![]()
Dennis you don't like 'em. Keep away from 'em.
I do, as do the vast majority of users and computer professionals.![]()
Not always by choice. Trust me, the vendor lock-in with Microsoft is crazy stupid.
Dennis you don't like 'em. Keep away from 'em.
I do, as do the vast majority of users and computer professionals.![]()
Not always by choice. Trust me, the vendor lock-in with Microsoft is crazy stupid.
I do, as do the vast majority of users and computer professionals.![]()
Not always by choice. Trust me, the vendor lock-in with Microsoft is crazy stupid.
It's a series of choices by people in an organization, of course. And we're not just talking operating systems and Microsoft when discussing the range of software and hardware configurations on networks that make PC-type computers preferable to professionals in most situations.
If they came through the office next week and announced that they were switching our network and all our computers over to Macs (ha!) I'd shrug and work with what I was given - as long as customers are happy with our service, I'm no more attached to my work equipment than I am to the color they paint the office walls. But I wouldn't waste the extra money on that stuff if it were coming out of my own pocket.
I'm still using Vista and will be until I replace my current home machine in a few months - every couple of years I go out and spend a little less money than I did last time for a lot more storage and memory than I got the last time. Never have had a moment's trouble with Vista, including regarding device drivers, and the machine runs as well as it did when I bought it...but then, I would never browse the Internet using IE.![]()
I do, as do the vast majority of users and computer professionals.![]()
Apple's enterprise strategy was NeXT's enterprise strategy. In fact, when Apple bought NeXT, what was NeXT became Apple Enterprise. The only products that NeXT was successful selling was it's enterprise software (OPENSTEP Enterprise for Windows, Enterprise Objects and WebObjects). And though people believe that Apple paid over $400 million for NeXT to get what would become Mac OS X some 5 years later, in actuality they were buying the parts of NeXT's business that were earning money at the time of the sale (December of 1996). Apple later merged Enterprise Objects into WebObjects (in version 4) which runs on both Macs and Windows based systems.I won't deny that Mac's enterprise strategy is virtually non-existant.
Apple's enterprise strategy was NeXT's enterprise strategy. In fact, when Apple bought NeXT, what was NeXT became Apple Enterprise. The only products that NeXT was successful selling was it's enterprise software (OPENSTEP Enterprise for Windows, Enterprise Objects and WebObjects). And though people believe that Apple paid over $400 million for NeXT to get what would become Mac OS X some 5 years later, in actuality they were buying the parts of NeXT's business that were earning money at the time of the sale (December of 1996). Apple later merged Enterprise Objects into WebObjects (in version 4) which runs on both Macs and Windows based systems.I won't deny that Mac's enterprise strategy is virtually non-existant.
Microsoft works hard to lock people in and break cross platform standards. A perfect example was Java, which Microsoft saw as a threat. Java's reason for existing was a write once, run anywhere development environment. Microsoft came up with Java development software call Visual J++, but Microsoft polluted the code it made to make sure that anything written in it would only run in Windows. Sun sued Microsoft to stop polluting Java. Another example was Microsoft's attempt to add export to PDF to Office. PDF is an open standard that Adobe licenses for free as long as you stick to the standard, but Microsoft had to add code into their implementation that made PDFs made by Office only readable in Windows. Adobe sued Microsoft to stop polluting PDF. Apple gave a ton of it's Quicktime technology to MPEG4 as long as it was a free and open standard, shortly after the standard was released Microsoft came out with it's own versions of "MPEG4" which could only be viewed on Windows systems. Microsoft came up with their own versions of XML that is Windows only. And they attempted to put forward their own version of HTML (called MS-HTML) which only displayed correctly in IE. The media player that came with Windows XP when first released would purposely make bad quality MP3s so that people would convert their music to WMA files instead.
Lock-in is the way Microsoft operates. And locking out competition is a major part of that.
People complain about Apple products on Windows, but they seem to not realize that Microsoft has worked very hard to make sure that products from Apple don't run as well as they could. Apple wants it's products, like Quicktime, to run perfectly on Windows... and Microsoft has adjusted their APIs to hamper that. And it isn't just Apple and Quicktime, Real Player faced the same issues, so did Netscape, so did WordPerfect. Windows is a hostile environment if you compete with Microsoft in anything.
Really? I thought it was those guys at Google who kept saying 'don't be evil' or something? Just the other day Jobs was ridiculing them.
Part of that problem stems from the fact that most Mac users use their Macs like they always have and are unaware of the vast number of new technologies that Apple acquired when they bought NeXT (technologies Sun Microsystems was working to integrate into their OS before Apple bought out their partner from under them).
I believe this describes me, and would be interested in hearing more.
I love my iphone. I had to jailbreak it to use it abroad, and conversely turned off automatic updates on itunes so newer firmware wouldn't impose itself over my hackjob. Thus I have no problems being forced to download shit I don't want..
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