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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!nwnexus!kanefsky
- From: kanefsky@halcyon.com (Steve Kanefsky)
- Subject: Re: MACS COST TOO MUCH (NOT!)
- Message-ID: <1992Sep8.232350.28473@nwnexus.WA.COM>
- Sender: sso@nwnexus.WA.COM (System Security Officer)
- Organization: The 23:00 News and Mail Service
- References: <la4tfoINN43d@appserv.Eng.Sun.COM> <922 <ajross.715985399@husc10>
- Date: Tue, 8 Sep 1992 23:23:50 GMT
- Lines: 51
-
- In article <ajross.715985399@husc10> ajross@husc10.harvard.edu (Andrew Ross) writes:
- >ewright@convex.com (Edward V. Wright) writes:
- >
- >>In <92252.141443ASI509@DJUKFA11.BITNET> Michael Bode writes:
- >
- >>>No it doesn`t and yes it does. The name of the diskette is not A: it is a name
- >>>of up to 11 characters that is almost never used. At least I don`t know anyone
- >>>who gives names to his floppies (except mac users exchanging disks with PC`s).
- >
- >>I don't see what exchanging disks with PCs has to do with naming disks.
- >>Maybe you think Mac users are just doing this to annoy you. I name all
- >>my floppies *except* the ones I exchange with PCs. It makes it easier
- >>to know what's on them. I bet most other Mac users do the same thing,
- >>even if they never exchange disks with PCs at all.
- >
- >>You see, the Macintosh is smart enough that it actually knows what
- >>floppy disk is in the drive at any given time. On the PC, if you're
- >>saving your work on a certain disk, then remove that disk to do some
- >>other task, and forget to change disks back before you save your work
- >>again, you may end up saving your latest version on the wrong disk
- >>without ever knowing it. Several days later, when you insert the disk
- >>you *thought* you'd saved it on, you find that your latest work just
- >>isn't there. That won't happen on the Mac because you can see the name
- >>of the disk you're saving it to.
- >
- >OK fine, lets all go out and buy Mac's 'cause you can name disks. Back
- >when floppies were king, this was a MAJOR advantage; but now... Well,
- >hands up people, how many of you use your floppies more than once a week?
- >How many use them for anything but backup and software installation? Of
- >those of you who do use them, how many are not planning on upgrading to a
- >better file exchange format in the near future? At least where I am,
- >floppies are dead.
-
- These problems aren't limited to floppies. I like to see my disks on
- the screen with names, and I like to know that a given name always
- refers to a particular disk (including floppies, hard disks, hard disk
- partitions, RAM disks, file server volumes, etc.). In the PC world, the
- same fileserver volume may be mounted as D: on one machine, E: on
- another machine, and so on. Between all the partitions of hard disks,
- RAM disks, file server volumes, etc. it's very difficult to tell what's
- what (not to mention that some programs store pathnames in their
- configuration data, and would get confused if the data were on "E:" all
- of a sudden, instead of "D:").
-
- I'm not one to argue that there are absolutely *no* advantages of PCs
- over Macs, but you have to admit that disk handling is one clear
- advantage that the Mac has over PCs.
-
- --
- Steve Kanefsky
-
-