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2020. 2. 17. 19:16카테고리 없음

Today in Tedium: Ever find yourself in a bar with a single arcade machine, and the machine is inevitably not targeting gamers? Like, rather than, say, a fighting game or something iconic like NBA Jam or even Donkey Kong, it’s either a variation of Big Buck Hunter, a bowling game like Silver Strike Bowling, or a golf game like Golden Tee. These games, of course, aim for a wide audience, quite literally in the case of Big Buck Hunter. But the golf and bowling games are notable, really, because of their control method—they don’t use a joystick; they use a massive trackball. As far as input devices go, is perhaps the nerdiest, and therefore the most interesting. It’s also older than you might expect. Today’s Tedium is gonna tell you all about it—and why it’s not just a glorified mouse.

— Ernie @ Tedium Today’s GIF comes from a, which for some reason promoted a 2010 eBay auction of a Logitech Trackman using. The 5-pin bowling ball found a second life as the first trackball. Bags Ladies Leather Red Shoulder Elegant Kamierfa Tote Pompom Pu Women Vintage With For Oil The trackball is older than the mouse, and we can thank the Canadian military for it So, as it turns out, before the virtual bowling alley borrowed something from the trackball, the inventors of the trackball borrowed something from the actual bowling alley—specifically, the Canadian variation of it,. Unlike the giant hulking rocks that tend to get thrown in American bowling alleys, 5-pin relies on a ball slightly less than 5 inches in diameter—larger than a skee-ball (which is 3 inches in diameter) and roughly the size of the ball used in, but using five pins, instead of 10 (hence the name).

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Clearly, this is a fairly novel point about an object that has inspired a lot of other devices that have come since—and its one that hints at its initial creation in the early 1950s. The device is Canadian through and through, a project formulated at the behest of the Royal Canadian Navy by Ferranti Canada, as part of a much larger project—a military information system called Digital Automated Tracking and Resolving, or DATAR.

DATAR represented perhaps one of the most ambitious projects of the budding Canadian computer industry at the time, a sophisticated machine that allowed ships to transfer radar and sonar data with one another. The machine was conceived by Navy researcher Jim Belyea, who took advantage of a failed meeting between Ferranti and the Navy to pitch his ambitious idea.

According to a 1994 IEEE article, Ferranti was extremely impressed by Belyea’s vision. “It seemed to our group that what Belyea had in mind was very much the proper thing to be doing,”. “It was a first step in push-button warfare.

Belyea was thinking 15 years ahead of his time and Sir Vincent de Ferranti and the rest of our party were well in tune with him.” DATAR, considering both what it was and how early it was in computer history, was a very complex piece of work, having to integrate a number of cutting-edge technologies into a single machine., the resulting prototype used 30,000 vacuum tubes, and with its drum memory system, it could store 500 objects. An early prototype of the first trackball. Note the stripes on the ball.

(via the ) That machine included a radar screen, and that screen. Invented by Tom Cranston and Fred Longstaff and relying an air-bearings system formulated by Taylor, the system worked like this: An operator, using a terminal, would scan over an area using the trackball to target the correct area on the radar screen, and they would hit a trigger to store the information on the screen, and that information would get transferred to other ships. As it turned out, the idea, ambitious as it was, was eventually thrown out in favor of a system used by the U.S. Military—not because it wasn’t great (it was), but because the Canadian Navy wanted to be able to communicate using the same system as a close ally.

Navy’s solution, Naval Tactical Data System, could also input data automatically that DATAR required manual input for. (Also, it turned out that putting thousands of vacuum tubes on a ship is a bit of a technical challenge.) It wasn’t a complete loss. Ferranti reused much of the technology for its mainframes, including those it made after its merger with Packard Electric in 1958. The company was ahead of its time in other ways—the FP-6000 computer, built from the remains of DATAR, supported multitasking.

But the trackball, strangely enough, turned out to be the greatest legacy of one of Canada’s first major computing projects. The only downside, really, was the fact that, because DATAR was a secret government project,. Them’s the breaks, apparently. “Think about the state of play in the computer world in 1952. There were only a handful of operating computers in the world. Almost all were unreliable. There was no common software language.

Pulse rates were only 50-100kHz. The idea of using a ball to control a cursor which could intervene and change program execution was a million miles ahead.” — Tom Cranston, the co-inventor of the trackball, in 2001 about the significance of his invention at the time. While ball-based devices had been in use previously, the innovation of what they produced, per the magazine, was that it directly impacted what showed up on a computer screen. Cranston, who died in 2009, added that the device was a full generation ahead of what other inventors were doing during the period. In fact, the trackball came a full 16 years before in 1968, and a decade before, which didn’t rely on a ball.

Air-Traffic Controller 1st Class Justin S. Brown, shown in 2012 tracking incoming aircraft from the carrier air traffic control center aboard the aircraft carrier USS George H.W. Brown is using a trackball. How the “slew ball” helped define the job of the air traffic controller Over the years, the trackball found its way to the consumer market and the broader public. But before that happened, it gained an important niche use in an industry that was coming into its own along with the broader airline industry—the air traffic control field. ATC workers need to be able to track what’s happening in the sky to ensure a flight going in the air has a clear path, and that requires 360 degrees of movement, specifically the ability to change angles on the fly.

The concept of “slewing,” or rotating around an axis—usually the z axis, in the case of aircraft—was as a result an important one, and one that the trackball made easy to control. An example of a “slew ball” from the 1960s. (via the IFATCA Journal of Air Traffic Control) And as a result, it wasn’t called the trackball in the world of air traffic control—it was called a “slew ball,” a term used as early as 1967 in the publication. The word “trackball” didn’t come into common use until the 1970s and 1980s. A 1981 Philadelphia Inquirer article, published around thousands of striking air traffic controller union employees, explains how as a plane got close to the airport. Your plane is one of 70 to 100 little blips moving across that screen.

The controller punches the right code into a lighted green and orange key-board, and a number appears by the blip that is your plane. Once a controller has received the handoff, the computer automatically enters his code letter beside that number, and he begins to spin his “slew ball.” The slew ball is a smooth glass ball, identical to those on the electronic football games in a penny arcades, and he spins it with his palm. It moves a marker across the radar screen, and he lines it up over your plane’s blip. Then he “zaps” you. He pushes a button to “interrogate the target.” The altitude of your plane flashes onto the screen, and the computers in your plane’s cock-pit lock on to those in the radar room. In many ways, the slew ball was the one thing separating humans from a mission-critical application, and it worked effectively in that role. In fact, when the computer mouse started becoming common and air traffic controllers were getting trained to use it, there was at least some evidence of resistance, because trackballs were already in wide use.

“The main interactive tool was the mouse, but many subjects were not familiar with the use of the mouse. For those unfamiliar with the mouse, the training was too short,”. “Controllers commented on their unfamiliarity with the mouse, and their preference for the trackball currently in use in the ATC system.” It’s a fascinating situation that has likely played out in lots of other ways in the past—a niche piece of technology takes over a single sector to the point where its more mainstream alternative feels foreign when it’s finally introduced. An early ad for Logitech’s Trackman. (via ) Five key points in the mainstream evolution of the trackball. A 1973 article in the Shenandoah, Pennsylvania Evening Herald is the. In this case, the reporter was more focused on the fact that a TV monitor was a key element of the computer used to control an electrical system.

Ladies Leather Vintage With Bags Pompom Red Oil For Kamierfa Shoulder Tote Pu Women Elegant Arcade machines started to include built-in trackballs in the 1970s, with the real turning point for the input devices, decades before Golden Tee, being 1978’s tabletop arcade game, which than Madden. Atari would soon follow this game up with two trackball-driven arcade classics— Missile Command and Centipede. The Atari 5200, while a commercial failure that was taken off the market less than two years after its 1982 release, featured a trackball controller that was quite good—, which infamously had a stick that didn’t center. Explains that, unlike many other trackballs built for similar consoles, it uses an analog control, which made it flow more smoothly on games like Centipede and Missile Command.

On the home computer front, trackballs had been around in one form or another since 1983 or so, along with video game consoles. But the real turning point came in 1989, when the Swiss accessories manufacturer Logitech, which had buttons on one side of the device and the trackball on the other. Though to the market, the device became.

The 1989 release of the Apple Macintosh Portable to integrate a cursor into a portable computer, and since a mouse took up space, a trackball turned out to be the preferred option. The computer wasn’t very good, of course, but the trackball stuck around in many of Apple’s early Powerbook models.

(The trackpad would replace it starting in the late ’90s.). Here’s a question to ponder from a historic perspective: Is the trackball just a glorified mouse?

Or is it a distinctive device with its own benefits, design approach, and use cases? Certainly, it gets used in similar ways to a mouse or trackpad, and it certainly inspires some strong partisans,. But it also has a history that both predates competing input devices and gives it a cultural context separate from its upside-down friend.

(No bowling balls were used in the creation of the mouse.) A Centipede arcade cabinet. The trackball in this machine is roughly the size of a regulation pool ball. Even if when you break it down, the functionality is quite similar—though, as trackball partisans will tell you, pinpoint control is far easier with a marble-sized lump of plastic.

And just as wouldn’t be the same without a mouse, Centipede is just better with a trackball. Admittedly, it’s worth considering that, yes, the trackball isn’t as popular as either its rodent cousin or the trackpad, which quickly usurped the trackball’s role as a laptop mainstay due largely to the smaller number of moving parts. And the partisan arguments around trackballs, once a defining debate of the Windows era, now seem a bit old-hat considering that touchscreens have taken over so much of our computing experience. But while the trackball has never been the choice of the masses, it’s never completely faded, either. Last month, in fact, Logitech, a device that earned positive notice from both. Perhaps the trackball isn’t for everyone—but maybe it’s for you.

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Reasons in converting from PC to Mac: - Well, for one.I've always wanted a Mac, any Apple product really, but they're so expensive. I love the customer support. You get One-on-One help with a MacGenius at any Apple Store (which are basically in every city) instead of doing the push-button waiting for an 'agent' to help me on the phone. The sleek designs are very sexy lol. And with almost every Mac Desktop or laptop, you have a built-in web cam. Updates in software are always available and are so easy to update. Apple Technology makes me feel so 'technical' lol with all the high-end software and stuff.

I want the MacBook to be my laptop for life. Using it daily. Sometimes, I wanna make some video montages with my HD Cam.

Have it be a place to store my digital photos. I'm a huge music person. I need room for my 2,000+ songs on iTunes.

But I don't wanna seem like I'm only buying the MacBook Pro just for it's looks. I don't even know how to choose one. For example, what's the diff between 2.23 and 2.56GHz? What kind is a '1066MHz frontside bus. 3MB shared L2 cache' processor? What does it mean to have 'NVIDIA GeForce 9400M graphics processor with 256MB of DDR3 SDRAM shared with main memory' for graphics?

Is a '1066MHz DDR3 SDRAM' good? Should I upgrade to the 8GB memory instead of the retail 2GB or 4GB? In technical terms, knowing what those things mean i don't really know how best to explain it. All i can say really is the more money it costs the more (or i should really say better) specifications it has.

Maybe someone else on here can help a bit more with this but think about whether you need to be spending the extra money or not. I am also thinking about a macbook pro and wondered cos the sizes are small 2g ram with 160gb memory but my boyfriend has an old g4 powerbook and that still runs very well on the little spec it has (512 i think). At the end of the day i think 160gb is gonna be enough space for me cos even though i'm a photographer i never keep my photos online anyway, i always go straight to disk (unless i'm having probs with my hp like now and cant switch it on so cant get the pics i just uploaded lol). Yes the cosmetic side is important but u have to think first about whether it has everything you need. There are some good deals on pcs atm cos windows 7 is coming out, just think very carefully before you comitt to buy, whatever you get you want to last as long as it can. All that stuff means that you will have a fast, reliable machine with great graphics. That may sound glib, but the questions your asking go beyond the basics of computer knowledge and probably won't be addressed by most people on these forums (I hope I'm wrong and someone will spent the time to educate you).

As for the Ram, more is always better. However, Apple Ram is twice as expensive as say, Kingston-Crucial or Ramjet, all of whom make Ram to meet Apple specs. An Apple computer is more than pretty, they are the best thing made. Message was edited by: macbig. If you don't know what these terms mean then they don't mean anything to you.

In other words, they should not have anything to do with your decision of what machine to buy. If you were a hard core power user you would know what specs you need.

If you are not that power user than the minimum of specs will be more than plenty. Apple doesn't sell stripped down cut rate low end computers. You don't have to concern yourself whether the specs are good enough if you don't know what they mean. Having said that, maybe you can tell me how one finds 'sexy' in a piece of electronic hardware? Maybe I am just too old to get turned on by a machine. I, too, thought I'd my life would be rosier with a move from PC to Mac. I'm afraid I'm getting jaded after having 'issues' with my MBP since I purchased in Nov 2008 but here are some observations.

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Some are more technical in nature. What I have come to know of my MBP does not warrant the price differential with a comparable WinTel laptop (but there sure are some junky cheapo plastic Wintel laptops out there). The components (e.g. Optical drive, wireless) in my MBP offer poorer performance than a 8 year old IBM Thinkpad (error correction on scratchy disks) and a 3 year old Toshiba Celeron Satellite (connecting through walls), respectively. I've had hardware issues from the day I purchased. Some of these differences are hard to detect prior to purchase, unfortunately. The OS performance, particularly its management of dual-core processors and, apparently virtual memory, is worse than Win XP, particularly if you like doing many things at once.

(This is a gut-feel kind of thing - how often do I lack responsiveness on the Mac vs XP. Why do both processors shut down momentarily (i.e. Music stops playing) when the screen blanks out (screen saver)?) 4. The Genius Bar is nice if you have a lot of questions to ask and it is convenient to get to; if you have to travel any great distance, the novelty will get old very fast.

You get only 3 months of phone support which, for me, is more useful. Personally, I prefer h/w and s/w which one doesn't need to ask so many questions about. It is handy though when you've got a problem to talk to someone in person; it is harder for them to be unhelpful when they are staring you in the face. Software updates are easy on the MAc as you say. My 2002 Thinkpad had similarly easy updates. Don't know what Lenovo has currently. Yes, the built-in cam can be fun and even useful.

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As to your questions re the specs: - processor speed likely won't be noticed, given choices available in a particular model, except if you are doing processor-intensive tasks like still or motion video editing, manipulating massive databases or spreadsheets. Then the speed can make a difference because all that processing is just a bunch (billions) of math equations that need to be solved. The faster processors solve them faster. The front-side bus stuff I basically ignore and don't know that much about but it and other bus stats are related to how fast data (bits and bytes) can be transmitted between various components in your system.

Gamers (I think) benefit from fast bus speeds (video data) as do systems that read/write massive amounts of data to/from disk or RAM. you likely haven't priced 8GB memory if you are asking about it.

2GB in a Mac is not useful, get 4GB but save yourself money and buy it from a source other than Apple. It's an easy DIY upgrade. 2,000 songs is nothing (except a dent in the bank account if it's all iTunes). But given hard drive prices these days, I'd suggest a 320GB (maybe 250GB) minimum. There's not much difference in cost unless you go to 500GB which you likely won't need for a couple of years at which time they'll be much cheaper and standard equipment. Again, look away from Apple for the larger hard drives (they charge a lot for the benefit of shopping in their lovely stores and to pay for the colourful T-shirts).

don't forget to also buy a backup (external) drive if you don't have one. It would be a shame to have a drive crash on you without a backup.

Hope this is useful. Greetings, Navygirl, welcome to Apple! Well, for one.I've always wanted a Mac, any Apple product really, but they're so expensive. Actually, most people save money by buying Macs. There's an old saying 'Penny-wise, Pound (dollar) foolish' which means people who compare items and buy the cheapest one save money in that purchase, but often find that the cheap thing breaks down fast, and have to buy the thing over and over again, losing more money in the long run then they saved. Macs save you money in a lot of ways. First, they last longer than most other laptops.

I still see 'Clamshell' Macs in use which are eleven years old! If you buy a Mac Laptop, you can expect to use it for a good 4-5 years before you might feel the need to get another.

So cut the cost in half because you're saving having to buy a new laptop in two years. Then consider that they retain their resale value. You can actually sell the old Pro and get some money for it toward a new one. So, you save money that way. Next, you won't have to buy virus protection. So you save money that way, and you won't have to buy a lot of software that you often have to buy with PCs because Mac comes with almost all the software you need bundled in. That includes photo, video and music software.

You can also run the PC programs you have on the Mac if you wish. So you have two-in-one computers.

So, again, you've saved money. As you can see, if you were to add all these things together, you might well find that the Mac was a much better deal than even dirt cheap laptops, because dirt cheap laptops are no-frills laptops-they seem cheap, but after you've bought all the stuff you need for them, you've spent almost as much as you might have on a fully equipped Apple. And you get even more with the Apple then just the extras you'd have to buy if you went cheap. As you said, you've got great customer support and 1 year warranty (unless you buy Apple care which gives you 3 years, and constant phone support). Again, you save money because problems will get fixed without incurring repair costs (obviously, if you spill coffee on the machine, all bets are off).

There's also an element here of you-get-what-you-pay-for, which means that you'll get good quality screen, aluminum body, built-in camera, illuminated keyboard, sound system, long-life battery, even the plug which pops out if you pull it so you don't bring the computer crashing to the floor. So while the computer may be pricy, you are getting your money's worth. And yes, the Macbook is very good for using daily. I recently had to remind a new Macbook user that she need never turn off the computer or quit programs.

She only need close the lid and go. Open the lid and start up again. This is where you'll save the most money.

You'll be more productive, get more done and that, again, saves you money. In short, by and large, Mac Laptops are good investments. You don't have to get the most expensive machine, either. 2.23GHz is fine for you, as is 256MB. You will probably want 4-8GB RAM (memory) as that keeps things speedy and allows you to have a lot of programs running.

Videos and music do take up room on a laptop and that should inform you as to how many MG of harddrive you might need. Better to have, as recommended, a back-up drive for finished videos. That will keep them from taking up room on the laptop. You may also be able to find refurbished pros and used pros at a discount if you still don't want to pay full price.

Does this help you with your decision? Well I went from PC to Mac and love it =) '1066MHz frontside bus' This is say the road on which the data gets travelled on the higher the number the more data that can be transported at once, pretty much a 2 lane road of cars vs a 4 lane highway u get my point 🙂 '2.23 and 2.56GHz' This is the speed in which the cars travel on that road, so all the cars being like a ferrari vs Veyron:P.

Its the speed in which that cars get to A and B '3MB shared L2 cache' Your computer had onboard RAM which is what data is stored in before it gets processed (Processor), when the data travelles to the CPU it enters the Cache which is practicly a really small onboard RAM for the CPU basicly a small queing system. The higher the number the more that can be stored in the Processor itself. '256MB of DDR3 SDRAM' The RAM inside the Graphics card which produces the images, DDR3 represents Dual Data Rate x 3 so yeah its faster than the rest atm.

256MB is the amount thats stored before its processed. '1066MHz DDR3 SDRAM' This again like above with the CPU its the Speed of the communication between the RAM and the graphics Processor (GPU). 'Should I upgrade to the 8GB memory instead of the retail 2GB or 4GB?' Well the amount that is stored in the RAM before processed, so yeah more is better 🙂 since the mac operating system has built in 64-bit computing in every OS the RAM amount can be higher and pushed further 🙂 I think you should go for it 🙂. I will state upfront I am a current Windows user and while I'm interested in purchasing a Mac - I'm struggling with justifying the added cost. I stumbled on this thread hoping to get more clarity and information about what I'm missing by staying with Windows.

I see JE13's post and I can't help but ask a few questions - after reading this post, perhaps a Mac just isn't geared for me? JE13 wrote: First, they last longer than most other laptops. I still see 'Clamshell' Macs in use which are eleven years old! If you buy a Mac Laptop, you can expect to use it for a good 4-5 years before you might feel the need to get another. So cut the cost in half because you're saving having to buy a new laptop in two years. Then consider that they retain their resale value.

You can actually sell the old Pro and get some money for it toward a new one. So, you save money that way. I have a 6 year old Windows desktop that works fine so I'm not forced into buying a new one. I'm just interested in some of the new technology (HDMI, webcam, bluetooth, SATA, etc). This reasoning around why a Mac costs me less doesn't resonate with me.

JE13 wrote: Next, you won't have to buy virus protection. So you save money that way, and you won't have to buy a lot of software that you often have to buy with PCs because Mac comes with almost all the software you need bundled in.

That includes photo, video and music software. You can also run the PC programs you have on the Mac if you wish. So you have two-in-one computers. So, again, you've saved money. As you can see, if you were to add all these things together, you might well find that the Mac was a much better deal than even dirt cheap laptops, because dirt cheap laptops are no-frills laptops-they seem cheap, but after you've bought all the stuff you need for them, you've spent almost as much as you might have on a fully equipped Apple. And you get even more with the Apple then just the extras you'd have to buy if you went cheap. If I was to buy a Windows laptop today, I leverage free A/V software (AVG) and it comes with MS Office suite.

If I was to purchase a Mac, is there additional costs associated with purchasing MS Office? This reasoning around why a Mac costs me less doesn't resonate with me (kinda sounds like it will cost more?). JE13 wrote: As you said, you've got great customer support and 1 year warranty (unless you buy Apple care which gives you 3 years, and constant phone support). Again, you save money because problems will get fixed without incurring repair costs (obviously, if you spill coffee on the machine, all bets are off). There's also an element here of you-get-what-you-pay-for, which means that you'll get good quality screen, aluminum body, built-in camera, illuminated keyboard, sound system, long-life battery, even the plug which pops out if you pull it so you don't bring the computer crashing to the floor. So while the computer may be pricy, you are getting your money's worth. Don't Windows laptops comes with a 1-year warranty, too?

Granted, I can pay for extended support just like I can with a Mac, too. Aside from the plug that pops out if you pull it and the aluminum body, the other specifications come with a Windows laptop, too. This reasoning around why a Mac costs me less doesn't resonate with me. JE13 wrote: And yes, the Macbook is very good for using daily. I recently had to remind a new Macbook user that she need never turn off the computer or quit programs. She only need close the lid and go. Open the lid and start up again.

This is where you'll save the most money. You'll be more productive, get more done and that, again, saves you money. In short, by and large, Mac Laptops are good investments. Don't Windows laptops have the same features?

My work laptop that runs windows does this and while I can't close the lid on my desktop (haha), I can set it to hibernate and it will come back on with my programs, too. This reasoning around why a Mac costs me less doesn't resonate with me. JE13 wrote: You don't have to get the most expensive machine, either.

2.23GHz is fine for you, as is 256MB. You will probably want 4-8GB RAM (memory) as that keeps things speedy and allows you to have a lot of programs running. Videos and music do take up room on a laptop and that should inform you as to how many MG of harddrive you might need.

Better to have, as recommended, a back-up drive for finished videos. That will keep them from taking up room on the laptop.

You may also be able to find refurbished pros and used pros at a discount if you still don't want to pay full price. The specifications I would be buying will cost me more, but be less then that of what I would see on a Windows machine. This reasoning around why a Mac costs me less doesn't resonate with me.

Does this help you with your decision? Aside from being aesthetically pleasing, I'm still not certain how to justify buying a MacBook Pro which will cost me nearly double the amount of money to do the same thinks a Windows laptop can do. What am I missing? The Mac laptops are very nice, but I can't logically conclude I should buy one since I can't grasp what I'm getting for the extra money. Message was edited by: XtremeSki2001 Message was edited by: XtremeSki2001. Well, first X, I was primarily discussing the reasoning of buying a computer that's dirt cheap vs.

Comparisons in price are often about very cheap, pared-down laptops vs. A new, top-of-the-line Mac, not buying a new PC that is equal in bells and whistles to the Mac. Next, I'm glad your machine is lasting you.

I didn't mean to imply that all PC's fail to last. Some are built to last and last and keep their resale value, too, but there are too many of the pared down ones that are dead within two years, especially when the software changes and demands that the computers have the right hardware to keep up. Macs do have a good reputation for lasting even though radical changes in software. Next, let us keep in mind that Navy is talking about buying a brand new Pro. There is the Macbook laptop and plenty of used/refurbished Pros that would cost less and, yes, would be comparable in price to PC computers of equal quality. As for MS Office, you are quite right that Mac isn't going to bundle every program you could ever want or need with its computer. There are free programs that one can download from the internet and use on Mac in place of Office, or you can keep the MS office you have and use it on the Mac by running Windows, but if Office is what you want, and you want it for the Mac, then it must be purchased.

I merely pointed out that the programs Navygirl might want came with the Mac and she wouldn't have to pay extra for them. Her focus was on making movies and music.

As for Apple support vs. Windows support.Apple has the highest rating when it comes to customer support of any computer company. Consumer Reports indicate that wait times are shorter, personnel friendly and issues usually resolved quickly and easily. If you don't feel that's worth paying extra, I understand. It's like whether dealing with viruses are a big deal to you or not.

We all decide what is worth or not worth more money. Don't Windows laptops have the same features? My work laptop that runs windows does this and while I can't close the lid on my desktop (haha), I can set it to hibernate and it will come back on with my programs, too. Don't ask me. Every other Windows user I know asks about shutting down the computer rather than closing the lid. I've no idea why they're so misinformed. If nothing Apple can offer resonates with you, then it doesn't resonate.

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I remember, for example, that Apple used to make all it's laptops in the U.S., giving people jobs. That, by the way, was one of the things that used to resonate most with me, but, alas, did not resonate enough with consumers to keep Apple from outsourcing its product in order to lower prices and compete. I, personally, am glad that Apple computers now resonate with enough consumers, in spite of their higher prices, that the company isn't likely to make more such compromises.

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Which is to say, sometimes when you pay more, it's for things that matter a lot even if they're not evident, to your eyes, in the product. Xreme, Your right Apple computers are priced higher than most others, however take look at the configuration of the Macbook Pro vs any other manufacture. Compare the specifications dollar for dollar and the MBP will still be more expensive in most cases, but not by much. Yeah they are. You pay extra but then think about the design of the laptops their beautiful. No huge grills for the overly worked PC ventilation.

The operating system is just bliss, Apple stated that their new OS will work on any Mac produced. When vista could hardly work smoothly on an average XP computer. They think of the simplicity, MagSafe power cord I thought yeah its cool but will it ever happen, as yes it did happen and i was happy i had MagSafe.

LED screens, Touch gestures. I was using a pc the other say and tried to use Expose:P Plus Ive had my mac for about nearly a year and it has never locked up on me. Please if u ever get the change take a walk into an Apple store u feel it! Xo NavyGirl: I bought my first Mac a month ago and, as you, I had some doubts before switching to the Mac world so I'll share my experience with you and I hope this will help you in making the best decision. I've always been curious about the Mac world and I was about to buy my first one in 2007.

It was quite expensive, so I ended up buying a toshiba laptop to save some money, also because I needed Linux for work, so I would have had the apple hardware without their fantastic operating system. It wasn't obviously the best choice. If you're planning to install Windows 7 or Linux on your next computer then you'd rather buy a PC. Now, for work, I use my agency's laptop. I wanted to buy another laptop just for home and this time Mac seemed to be the best choice, for these reasons: - Best hardware: the unibody chassis is really phenomenal.

This laptop has the best keyboard I ever had on a laptop, the display is stunning, I'm not bothered by any fans, the trackpad is revolutionary - Best OS: I've always been a Linux fan but OS X is stable, fast and easy to use, together with a beautiful 'attire'. It's perfect for having fun and working at the same time 🙂 - Very good performances: I bought the 'basic' model, with just 2GB of RAM. I don't think I need an upgrade, because it's very fast. Maybe in the future I'll siwth to an SSD, but OS X is not so hungry of system memory, as far as I've experienced.

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I wouldn't upgrade to 8GB of ram. Maybe if you're working with many applications at the same time it is a good idea to have 4GB, but 8GB are quite expensive and I don't think you actually need so much memory. I'd choose the 2.23 GHz cpu, I think it's more than enough for everyday use 🙂 For what concern the price I have to agree with the guy who wrote that old saying 'penny wise'.

In Italy we have a very similar saying and I strongly agree with it. Macbook is worth the price, believe me 🙂. I have converted to Mac this year. I'll skip the long monologue about how much more esthetically pleasing the Mac experience is.

Here is my response to 'expensive' comment. No need for anti-virus - Free photo management software - Free video management software - Free DVD creation software - Free pdf creation software (not like a full blown Adobe Writer, but does all I need to do) - No problems (for me) finding wireless connections, printers etc.

A coolest assortment of accessories for music funs - e.g., AirportExpress (I guess this is where savings stop 😉 Snow Leopard is not perfect, but I did not have any serious problems with it. Not going back to Windows for sure ever. Apple Footer. This site contains user submitted content, comments and opinions and is for informational purposes only. Apple may provide or recommend responses as a possible solution based on the information provided; every potential issue may involve several factors not detailed in the conversations captured in an electronic forum and Apple can therefore provide no guarantee as to the efficacy of any proposed solutions on the community forums. Apple disclaims any and all liability for the acts, omissions and conduct of any third parties in connection with or related to your use of the site.

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