home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!uwm.edu!ogicse!das-news.harvard.edu!husc-news.harvard.edu!husc10!ajross
- From: ajross@husc10.harvard.edu (Andrew Ross)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.misc
- Subject: Re: RE-MACS COST TOO MUCH (NOT!)
- Message-ID: <ajross.714890195@husc10>
- Date: 27 Aug 92 04:36:35 GMT
- Article-I.D.: husc10.ajross.714890195
- References: <714823281.F00001@blkcat.UUCP> <ewright.714853873@convex.convex.com>
- Lines: 190
- Nntp-Posting-Host: husc10.harvard.edu
-
- ewright@convex.com (Edward V. Wright) writes:
-
- >In <714823281.F00001@blkcat.UUCP> Kaz.Karl@f1138.n261.z1.fidonet.org (Kaz Karl) writes:
-
- >>Oh, be real...Perhaps you can buy an si for $2500, but that
- >>clunky machine is the equivilant of the 396SX I just got for
- >>a client for six hundred new...
-
- >Be real yourself. I use a 20 MHz 386 at work -- A real 386,
- >not the crippleware SX version. (There's no such thing as
- >a 396, by the way.) We paid over $7000 for the hardware and
- >software. After struggling with this machine and its miserable
- >performance for over six months, we finally decided that we needed
- >to spend even more money to buy accelerated graphics cards. Not to
- >to do anything sophisticated like fast 32-bit graphics, mind you,
- >just to run Windows. Each of these cards cost about $600 by itself.
- >I have to admit that, compared to previous performance, Windows flies
- >with the nkPew card. At impulse power, at least. I'd have to rate the
- >performance as comparable to a Mac Classic. The IIsi, by comparison,
- >flies at warp speed.
-
- You got swindled. Since 20 MHz 386's are no longer readily available, you
- probably bought your machine some time ago, which makes comparing prices
- with corrent machines somewhat problematic (Clone prices have dropped by
- about a factor of two over the past year and a half). Also, $600 for a
- video card is ridiculous. The ATI Graphics Ultra (arguably the fastest
- Windows accelerator, certainly the most expensive) will run you $500.
- You'd be better off buying an S3 card for ~$250. These days, only ~$2300
- will buy you a 33 MHz 486, WITH coprocessed graphics. On my 486 (no
- graphics accelerator), Interface speed is roughly the same as the System 7
- ci's I use at the computing center here.
-
- Also two notes: The 396 above was a typo, give it a rest. It happens.
- Also, the 386SX is crippled in precicesly the same way as the 68030 in the
- Classic II and LC II. Both are 32 bit processors forced to deal with the
- outside world (memory) through a 16 bit bus.
-
- >>and Mac charges for it's >own< OS software, if you want a legitamate copy...
-
- >What always amazes me about PC bigots is not just their ignorance,
- >but how *proud* they are of that ignorance. If you spent five minutes
- >at an Apple dealer, or talked to anyone who owned a Macintosh, you
- >could learn that is not true. You can download a *legitimate* copy
- >from any number of places, get a free copy (except for the cost of
- >the disks and sometimes a small copying fee) from a dealer, or make
- >a *legitimate* copy from a friend. Congratulations, you have just
- >made a complete fool of yourself in front of several thousand Macintosh
- >users who are laughing themselves silly at another dumb PC jock.
-
- Please tone down the language, you are impressing no one. For myself (a
- dumb PC jock), I don't consider an unsupported, undocumented copy of an OS
- legitimate; legal perhaps, but not legitimate.
-
- >>...and OS/2 is actully cheaper...
-
- >Oh? IBM is actually *paying you* to take OS/2? Well, maybe they
- >figured they'd charge what it was worth. :-)
-
- >>As for DOS users only having two useful programs... There's nothing
- >>to demonstrate that this isn't actually voluntary and to the user's
- >>advantage...
-
- >Let me get this straight, having only one or two programs at your
- >disposal is an advantage? Yeah, right. Just like owning only one
- >or two books. Why would anyone want more than that? Of course it
- >may be "voluntary." Because it's so difficult and expensive to try
- >out new software, the typical PC users probably doesn't even realize
- >what he's missing. If you buy a toy computer, like a Commodore 64
- >or a "396SX", you may find it hard to even imagine the full potential
- >of what a real computer can do.
-
- If having only two programs simplifies training and support costs while
- minimizing productivity losses (yes, it can be done), then YES, it is an
- advantage. I've seen more toy software bought (but never used) than I'd
- like to remember; for BOTH PC's and Mac's. In my experience, the ONLY
- people who like trying out new software are the ones who generally know
- what they are doing (and would have no trouble learning PC software).
-
- >>Nothing bugs me more than this sillyness of trying to believe
- >>one's own machine is the best at everything...You'd better face
- >>the facts: DOS machines have some serious advantages over Macs...
-
- >Agreed. At least 75% of all computer games, for example,
- >seem to be made for PCs only. If I wanted to buy a computer
- >solely for playing games, I would choose a PC. But if I want
- >a machine that's versatile enough to meet *all* my needs, I
- >won't even consider it.
-
- Obviously. But (and oooh, am I gonna catch flames for this one) unless
- your needs include NEEDING more than one screen and/or having a
- requirement for nifty movies in the OS, I'd be willing to bet that a PC
- will fulfill them. Multiple screen support and Quicktime are the only
- REAL advantages a Mac has (I can feel the heat already). There are catch
- phrases and buzzwords aplenty, (ease of use! Fast SCSI drives! Consistant
- interface! Fully integrated hardware!) but none of them boil down into a
- "You can do this on a mac but not on a pc" sentence. Precious few of them
- even boil down to "You can do this on a mac better than on a pc." This
- dumb PC jock thinks that if any of you would actually sit down with a PC
- and just USE it instead of stopping every few seconds to think "Hey, my
- mac does that better (or even differently)" you would find that, just like
- with the mac, there are very few things you CAN'T do. Now consider that
- buying a PC to do that job is considerable cheaper (PLEASE INSERT FLAME OF
- YOUR CHOICE HERE) and you have the point most of us dumb PC jocks have
- been trying to get across.
-
- >>like the limitations the Mac resources set on application design
- >>allow DOS programs to be more vertical, that is, they can be
- >>designed to be the >best< at what they do, not crippled by being
- >>universally recognisable...
-
- >You have absolutely no idea what you're talking about. First of
- >all, nothing requires a Macintosh programmer to use resources
- >if he doesn't need/want to. Secondly, resources make it *easier*
- >to customize software for specific applications. Thirdly, this
- >has absolutely nothing to do with software being "vertical." I
- >am a bit surprised, though, that you at least knew the Macintosh
- >has resources.
-
- I'm not the least bit surprised that you added that last sentence. PLEASE
- realize that this perhaps indicates the poster knows what he is talking
- about, and that perhaps he holds opinions worthy of consideration.
-
- >>you can't buy accounting or database software for the
- >>Mac that is anything better than middle-of the road on
- >>a DOS machine...
-
- >Bullpuckey. One of the leading tax packages for PCs is called
- >Macintax for Windows. Can you perhaps guess from the title what
- >machine that program was developed for first?
-
- I know nothing of accounting software. I will add, though, that I have
- never heard of Macintax. I have heard of other packages, such as Quicken
- and Microsoft Money. As an uninformed user, I would therefore have to
- conclude that Macintax is not a leading product. I do know a little about
- databases, and am forced to agree with the original poster.
-
- >>And take BBSs...there's absolutely nothing for the GUI
- >>forced on Mac designers to do...
-
- >Uh, yeah. All those America Online icons are just figments
- >of my imagination, right?
-
- Look at the poster's next sentence... A BBS server is only an ASCII
- character processor. It's only means of communication with it's clients
- is through a 1-bit character-only bus (a serial line). You do realize
- that America Onlines servers are not Mac's, don't you? I'd even wager
- that they don't even have a GUI on the system.
-
- >>it just wastes power that could be used to
- >>process the character chains that are all even boards with GUI emulating
- >>clientware use...
-
- >Fortunately, the Mac has plenty of power to "waste." In fact, even
- >the "396SX" does. Even the fastest modems operate so slowly that the
- >CPU spends most of its time just sitting around, twiddling its thumbs,
- >waiting for I/O to happen. It seems that not only don't you know anything
- >about Macs, you don't know very much about computers in general.
-
- I think you misunderstood the poster's point. He was talking about BBS
- clients, which may be forced to handle many dozens of simultaneous serial
- ports. This is a MAJOR drain on CPU power. Having to commit CPU time to
- maintaining a superfluous (to this application) GUI is pointless. Thus,
- very few dedicated BBS servers are run on Mac's. Most are PC's or Unix boxes.
-
- >>And even on the GUI is better end...Amiga has a much better interface than
- >>Mac,
-
- >The Amiga has better high-speed *graphics*. The interface suffers
- >from the same sort of inconsistency as Windows programs. Every
- >program has its own unique look and feel because programmers do
- +h>their own thing. Learning to use one program does not make it
- >any easier to learn another. (I know... who wants to use more
- >than one or two programs anyway, right?) On top of that, most
- >Amiga programs I have seen, like many PC programs, display an
- >excessive, frivolous, and inappropriate use of color that makes
- >screens hard to read.
-
- Fair enough. Please realize, though, that this is a judgement of taste.
- While I've never been an Amiga fan, this dumb PC jock rather LIKES
- windows' use of color. Hell, if that's such a problem, just pick another
- pallette, it's easy to do. Or get OS/2 (not that there aren't a lot of
- other reasons to). IBM chose a much less colorful interface default.
-
- OK folks, flame away. Just keep it light. There are much better reasons
- to bite someone's head off than his advocacy of a computer.
-
-
- Andy Ross
- ajross@husc.harvard.edu
- Just another dumb PC jock.
-