| Article: |
Jaguar: Time to Stop Pussyfooting Around | |
| Subject: | What is causing the "Switch"... But Why? | |
| Date: | 2002-08-04 01:22:48 | |
| From: | derrick | |
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Response to: What is causing the "Switch"...
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My personal observations are consistent with your comment. Most of the people I know who have moved to Mac OS X lately have come from Windows, not earlier versions of Mac OS.
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Showing messages 1 through 2 of 2.
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What is causing the "Switch"... But Why?
2002-08-04 17:23:54 dogzilla [View]
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What is causing the "Switch"... A Few are Upset :)
2002-08-04 23:09:16 Derrick Story |
[View]
Hi, Actually a lot of Mac users are upset. They don't like the change to Mac OS X. They don't like the pressure Apple is putting on them to switch. And they certainly don't like the costs involved. A lot of the mail sent directly to me reflects this. And I see it in some of the talkbacks too.
There's nothing wrong with that. In fact it's a good way to find out what's really on people's minds.
I do agree though, that for some folks, they just don't care. And that's OK too :)



This doesn't mean that they're upset - it just means that OSX isn't that important. And many of these people take the (appropriate) view that there's no need to spend upgrade money if your current tool works very well and there's no personally perceivable advantage to the replacement.
Personally, I use OSX full-time on my 300mhz G3 WallStreet. It's plenty fast for me - I've never inderstood the ppl who complain about speed. But OSX makes sense for me, since I'm a web developer. I have MS Office to do my business work, and Studio MX, Photoshop, and BBEdit for development. My big advantage is that I can replicate my production environment (Apache, MySQL, PHP, etc.) on my laptop and not be tied to the office anymore.
However, for most other people, the advantages are less clear. And to argue that it is our duty to upgrade to support Apple...well, to say I disagree is to put it mildly. If Apple can't deliver what the market wants at a reasonable price, then it will (and should) fail. Their failure will open a niche and a smart competitor will step in and deliver a better product. Apple is an inhteresting company, but it's just a company like any other, and their products are tools like any others. Being religiious about your tools is to put your focus and effort in the worng place: it's what you create with the tools that's important, not the tool sitself.