Brian Austin said:
I don't know what the big deal is. I install Windows XP Pro (45 minutes)
And here's where the comparison ends. I buy myself a Mac which has the OS installed properly already, OR when I'm upgrading I install the latest version of the OS. A few clicks, then walk off and take a coffee break...
Brian Austin said:
get the NIC driver set up
This is funny, to me. Why should Joe User have to set up a NIC driver? Why should Joe User even have to know what a NIC is? Why should Joe User have to even know what a driver is?
Yesterday, I wanted to print out my flight plan off DUATS at my sister's house. She has a Canon i860 color inkjet printer. My computer has never touched a Canon printer before. So, I chose "print" in my browser. In the Printer popup, I chose "new printer". I plugged the printer into my USB port. On the screen, "Canon i860 - USB" appeared. I clicked OK. My document printed. The whole think took maybe 10-15 seconds longer than if I'd printed it on my normal laser printer at home.
Brian Austin said:
Still has to be done on a Mac, but it is WAY more elegant than on a PC. You don't have to open up the networking control panel, etc. It'll try and find as much as it can by itself, leaving Joe User to type in things like access phone numbers.
I also don't have to do anything when switching connections. I usually connect via WiFi, but a hotel I stayed in Sunday night had Ethernet. It's been so long since I had to set that sort of thing up on a Mac that I did open my networking control panel. There was already a little red "light" next to WiFi and a green light next to Ethernet. It said "The Ethernet cable is plugged in and you are connected to the internet." I typed in a web site address, did the hotel's login thing, and the rest was done for me. No reboot, no typing in IP addresses, no selecting DHCP, nothing. It just worked. (I sense a theme here.)
Brian Austin said:
find the remaining hardware
Oh, how I don't miss PC's. You guys need to see how "plug and play" really works. Hint: You can't see how it really works on a PC. I don't have to buy "plug and play" compatible hardware. I don't have to have my OS CD's handy just in case. I don't have to wait for drivers (there we go again) to install themselves.
I plug in a printer when I want to print? Select the printer, as I explained above. I plug in a random digital camera? iPhoto opens. I plug in a DV Cam? iMovie. I plug in a hard drive? It mounts on the desktop.
Brian Austin said:
Something else that happens automatically on the Mac, with the exception of needing my Admin password when making updates to the OS and such. This prevents malware from doing anything, since the OS would ask me for my password.
Brian Austin said:
Pre-installed. I'm not sure what all new Macs are coming with these days, but it's a fairly impressive list. In addition to all of the Apple software (GarageBand, DVD Player, QuickTime, iTunes, iMovie, iDVD (authoring), iThis, iThat, etc.) they have quite a few surprises, like QuickBooks. ("New User Edition" - I called Intuit, registered for free, and now my flying club's books are in it.)
So, that's what the big deal is. What seems "easy" to an experienced PC user, I laugh at as being an awful lot of unnecessary work. That reminds me of other very common questions I used to get as a consultant when training a PC user on their first Mac: "Now what else do I have to do?" "That's it?" "Why doesn't everyone have a Mac?"
http://www.apple.com/switch/