I know this doesn't belong here but over the past few years I've become some accustomed to the judgment of my fellow KMC comic book posters that I trust their judgment above all. So Digi if you could allow this to remain open for a short while so I can gather some information that would be great.
So I just bough the new imac 20 inch with the Leopard operating system for $1600. It looks great and it runs better. I'm just running if it's worth the price or if I should have stuck with a PC and the windows operating system.
Well I had a year old Dell, but after it crashed for the 50th time I needed to replace my computer for school. After being told by a trillion people that Mac's were better than PC's I decided to grab one. Just wondering if it's worth the price tag.
Gender: Male Location: Hiding from The Doctor, shhhh.....
IMO, Macs don't crash nearly as much as other computers. And they almost never get hit by viruses.
The downside is that certain programs don't work as well, or at all. Good news is, thanks to bootcamp, you can run PC programs on a mac with no problems. Leopard is still being worked on, so you should stick with Panther until they fix all the bugs.
__________________ Wanted: New sig. Something crazy, zany, and slightly evil. Will give sig credit to whoever's I sport.
Gender: Unspecified Location: REALM OF THE UNDERWORLD
PC is far more durable, stronger, more versatile and has shown more feats than Mac. The only edge that Mac has over PC is faster speed and is always bloodlusted in the use of its graphic capability...
I think I may help in this, as I have two macs (24" iMac core 2 duo) and about 6 PC's (most of them are old and need to be sold off, but the newest PC is a dual core PentiumD, 2.8 Ghz, with a 8600 GT card).
The macs have become immensely more versatile with bootcamp, as mentioned by trickster. Install Bootcamp and you can install Vista, XP, or whatever other OS you want, even Linux or BeOS, etc.. What's funny is that some applications are actually much faster on windows XP on a iMac Core 2 Duo then they are when running a Universal Binary version on the Mac OS.
Plus side of the Mac OS: crashes less, less security risks (unless you're a jackass and put in your admin password when a drive-by install tries something), and very simple to use as far as driver support. Downside is mostly that there aren't that many universal binary games at this point, which is why you need to install BootCamp.
Personally I'm a PC guy, as I like to mess with every driver and hardware device on my system, and can name off the top of my head what almost every service does in XP, and work my way around the registry, etc.. Macs however are just plain easier to use and don't crash as much. Everything is designed with asthetics in mind.