homer
Member

Registered: Jan 2000
Location: Twin Cities, MN
Posts: 1683 |
quote: Of course, I consider that an advantage to the PC side due to flexibility. Macs just give you MacOS and certain flavors of *nix (only on some Macs) AFAIK. YMMV.
Well, this is an interesting argument FOR the use of Macs. Macs, natively, can run Mac OS and Linux. (you used to be able to run BeOS until Apple dropped the ball on that one).
However, you can run Windows quite easily using Virtual PC. Of course, this is emulated, so you do take a bit performance hit...you are not going to run the latest 3-D video game an be as happy with that on your PC.
The advantage of running Windows on a Mac is that you have an unlimited number of installs. You could install all releases of 95, 98, nt, 2K, etc. This makes the Mac a great testing platform for PC software. It sure beats having to partition your PC drive into 8+ partitions for every release of Windows.
But, again, this point could be argued either way.
P.S. joshieca: your comments are immature. A good debater sticks with the facts and builds upon those. Generalizations and personal accusations usually do more damage to one's argument than help. Just a thought.
And, yes, a dual-processor G4 running Final Cut Pro is an incredible video editing suite...top of the line for out-of-the-box systems (pc OR Mac), but, alas, it doesn't quite add up to the power of an Avid system yet (which, BTW, are often built on Macs)
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Last edited by homer on 04-19-2001 at 05:54 PM
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