| Weblog: |
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Apple's Paradox - Go Intel and Keep the Hardware
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It's actually a *good* thing |
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2005-11-10 10:28:37 |
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ghiebert
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My boss isn't the only person I've heard say he will buy a Mac the moment he can Windows (or at least the odd Windows application) on it.
People have wanted to buy Apple hardware for years. The only thing holding many of them back was the perceived loss of use of their existing applications and data. If they know they can install Windows on a new Mac as a fallback, we might actually see Apple becoming one of the top Wintel sellers.
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Showing messages 1 through 5 of 5.
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Oh, I'm the other way round
2005-11-10 12:01:12
michael98
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Oh, I'm the other way round
2005-11-14 03:51:36
KroSha
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Oh, I'm the other way round
2005-11-10 13:21:16
p.k.
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Oh, I'm the other way round
2005-11-10 13:50:50
ghiebert
[View]
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Oh, I'm the other way round
2005-11-10 13:21:59
p.k.
[View]
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Showing messages 1 through 5 of 5.
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I think some of the Apple hardware designs leave a lot to be desired. Worse, the *cost* of the hardware is a pain. That's not only what you pay for a new machine (in most cases, though not right across the range), but the *ongoing* cost. It's the cost of repairs as much as anything. The parts cost more; the labor costs more. You're not meant to get into Apple hardware yourself, and neither will most repair places touch it. The parts are expensive; and Apple has tied the whole deal up with its registered dealers.
I can do without Apple hardawre, but I'd love a robust well-engineered X86 machine like a ThinkPad - but running OS X.