foo fighter
Member

Registered: Oct 1999
Location: I'm not sure, but I see lots of lights everywhere.
Posts: 1287 |
Sigh!
I'm still not sure whether I will take the plunge or not, but I have been considering Macs some time. The hardware is simply beautiful, and OSX is the best of both worlds...a jaw dropping elegant new interface + the rock solid robust architecture of UNIX (BSD). The odd thing is, I have always been a PC Geek! I've built PCs, configured hardware, partitioned hard drives, installed/upgraded countless Windows installations...you name it, I've done it. But PCs have become rather boring. I blame this on a fixated "PC culture" that is introverted and too obsessed with clock speeds and more power. In the quest for more power, all other aspects to the PC have been pushed by the wayside. Integration between OS/hardware and attention to finer details such as style and design innovation are completely ignored. I find myself asking the same question: Will the PC ever change? Where is this platform headed? Every year we see more of the same: faster PCs. But it's still just the same old beige box! The DELL sytem that I bought over 3 years ago still looks exactly like their latest models (4100). Whenever I bring this issue up with my friends, who are also PC enthusiasts, the response is always the same; "HA HA! Go buy a Mac..Macboy!" So that's it? If I want my hardware to perform well..and look cool I have to turn to Apple? That should tell you there is something seriously wrong with this picture? If we want PCs to continue to remain the center of our digital world, we have to ditch the old way of thinking. No more of this "let them eat cake!" attitude.
No wonder consumers have turned their attention to other devices such as PDAs. They look cool...and they work!!! What a concept! I believe that any PC maker that continues to build the same old beige box will be dead within 18 months. Don't believe me? Look at Micron, they built excellent PCs, but what it ultimately comes down to is..they were just another box maker. Which system has more public awareness: a Micron PC or an iMac? The iMac may look silly (I'll never buy one!), but everyone knows what it is the moment the see one. Sorry guys, but in the end, looks do matter! Even Microsoft knows this, it's why they are spending so much development effort on the new user interface for WinXP. It's all about the user eXPerience (sorry, couldn't resist). And that's the sad part, Microsoft is finally understanding this, but PC OEMs are still clueless. There are of course a few mild attempts..Compaq's Presario and HP's Pavilion, but these aren't really systems that I can use for professional work. DELL recently tried to escape the beige box look with the Dimension 8100. It doesn't look all that bad, but there are a few tiny problems that go along with P4s:
1.) Pentium 4 systems come with RDRAM. Meaning; instead of paying $50 for 128MB of ram, your going to pay around $200-300. Nice huh? The days of cheap memory are coming to an end for PC users. Considering that Windows XP will need at least 256MB or Ram, and more, I'd say we are in for a major screw job here!
2.) THESE THINGS ARE BIG...REALLY BIG! Pentium 4 systems come in big enclosures necessary to accommodate all the hardware bloat, which is a step backward in PC design, IMO. Instead of PCs becoming smaller, stylish, more manageable and expandable, they're getting bigger. Same is true of the Athlon, although not as severe. Has anyone looked at the new HP Pavilions? They are gigantic!
And then of course there is Microsoft. Oh, Microsoft. As ZDNET columnist (former) Mary Jay Foley put; "If you thought Microsoft's past ant-competitive practices were bad...we aint seen nothin yet!" Microsoft has some screwy ideas that lay ahead for us PC users. An obscure plan called .NET (they're going to have to do a better job explaining what this is, because I'm still confused), Hailstorm (Microsoft Passport on steroids), a mandatory product activation system for Windows XP that will make adding or upgrading hardware a pain in the @ass, and even more frightening..."Subscription Computing". Needless to say, I'm more than a little worried. This is why I sometimes wonder if, perhaps, Microsoft should be broken up.
Damn, this post is long! Any way, sorry to go off topic with my rants, but what the hell..it's Friday. Just thought I'd share my thoughts.
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My blog: Pocketfactory
Last edited by foo fighter on 03-30-2001 at 08:00 PM
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