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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!purdue!mentor.cc.purdue.edu!noose.ecn.purdue.edu!gn.ecn.purdue.edu!jess
- From: jess@gn.ecn.purdue.edu (Jess M Holle)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.misc
- Subject: Re: RE-MACS COST TOO MUCH (NOT!)
- Message-ID: <1992Sep2.225758.21519@gn.ecn.purdue.edu>
- Date: 2 Sep 92 22:57:58 GMT
- References: <ST <ajross <ewright.715459786@convex.convex.com>
- Organization: Purdue University Engineering Computer Network
- Lines: 71
-
- This is truly a worn out subject, BUT since I had a related personal
- experience last night, I couldn't resist posting.
-
- I have a friend who I tried very hard to talk into a Mac purchase, but
- he kept on saying "But I can get a 486 with a NNN MB HD for less than
- the machine you are pushing." (Okay not an exact quote, but close).
- Keep in mind that I am not personally selling Macs and that since he is
- a student he could have gotten approx. 40% off MRP without ANY bother.
-
- He got his 486 a couple of days back. Last night I (a Mac guru, but not
- TOO shabby at DOS or Windows stuff) spent a couple of hours helping him
- install programs copy files onto his drive, etc. He had previously been
- unable to get any of this stuff working by himself. The only thing that
- he didn't have trouble with was installing Windows itself.
-
- After all that time, he admitted that he probably would be much happier
- with a somewhat slower computer for the same money if he could actually
- use and understand it. He now wishes he would have bought a Mac (in his
- own words, or paraphrased from them rather). He kept mentioning that the
- salesman had said that he would probably never need to look at the manual
- and he should have everything set up in no time.
-
- In his case, a 486 supplies unnecessary power (unless it is wasted on the
- inefficiencies of Window's GUI). An '030 Mac (say a IIsi for arguements
- sake) would provide a smooth GUI with a speed ROUGHLY on par with a 486
- (as far as computationally unintensive graphic interface only, I'm not
- talking raytracing here). For the word processing, spreadsheet work, and
- drawing that he is doing an '030 Mac would be quite adequate (and much
- cheaper than the 486 system that he bought).
-
- This particular friend is a business major, but I had a similar experience
- a couple months before that with an aeronautical engineering major. He
- had less trouble grasping the overall system, BUT he was not unscathed by
- his PC. He spent two entire days (in a very busy part of the semester)
- trying to figure out a mess with his COM ports, his IRQs, and a variety
- of other .SYS and .COM files to get his two modems and his mouse to
- coexist. A PC-"expert" and I also wasted much of those two days on the
- problem. Some time later, his computer completely forgot it had a hard
- drive (all initial attempts at getting it to recognize it failed). This
- required a call to the dealer of this particular brand of clone to get a
- bunch of settings over the phone and over a day out of 3 people's lives.
-
- Cheap PC's are filled with costs (and frustations). The learning curve
- is very steep (compared to a Mac, esp. since you MUST learn a fair
- dabbling of DOS even with WINDOWS) and the necessity of diving into
- interrupt settings and .COM/.SYS files and device tables whenever
- something goes wrong wastes many man-days on supporting computers that
- should be spent using them.
-
- For those of you who are about to say that OS/2 will solve all of these
- problems, I have two things to say:
-
- (1) Very few new PC owners start off with OS/2, since clone dealers
- don't push it and market inertia isn't pushing people in that
- direction (instead it FORCES them to deal with DOS and pushes
- them at Windows to solve all of DOS's shortcomings). Also, many new
- PC users get PC's partially because they are afraid of the unknown
- and they don't know anything about OS/2 (not all PC users just
- many), therefore they don't even consider it as an option.
-
- (2) I hope so for my friend's sake, because he is considering getting
- it soon and he expects it to solve all of his problems and to "work
- just like a Mac." Considering his difficulties with setting up
- Windows and DOS programs, for his sake I also hope that it is VERY
- easy to set up.
-
- Just my 2 (or perhaps less than that) cents worth,
-
- Jess Holle
- Mechanical Engineering Graduate Student in
- Computer Aided Design
-