Why do you buy Apple products?

Edit: Not trolling, just really want to see why I should invest in the product, I have many frineds that use them, and I have yet to come by a good reason. Is it just like the cigarette brand no reason why but it tastes better?

Why do you buy Apple products?

Why do you have to upgrade for every new option, the options that should and would have came with it, if it were not for them omitting them to coerce you into upgrading for the same product you already have. Not trying to troll here, just really curious to what is the motive behind what I see as waisting your money on a locked down product that you have to upgrade every 6 months. Has it to do with the trendy nature of the product that makes it cool at the moment, like some skinny jeans? Or, does the product really increase your productivity so much that it will justify the huge chunk of money you have to shell out just to own/upgrade a Mac.

I understand the "need" for photographers to use Apple product(I think), but with the modern PC's power, and the vast amount of software out there, I'm sure there is a better (and faster) option than a Mac. If I am wrong please correct me, so I can adjust my opinion to better my own computing experience.

"Wasting"... Waisting is related to the waist.

There are no better options than Macbooks, simply put. You want higher clock hertz, I prefer a better screen. You want more GPU power, I want 10 hours of battery life or more.

I used to own a ton of PC Notebooks, then you grow up and you realize half the things you don't need (gaming capability) you are able to get get and all the things you do want now (build quality, screen quality, mobility, etc) you can only get in a Mac.
 
I've never owned an apple computer (outside of an old and tired, used, G5 desktop... that I sold to friend soon after buying it), but if I ever purchased a laptop, it would probably be an apple. I'll explain below.

I used to be the anti-apple, PC or nothing, guy... I LOATHED apple. I went to school for graphic design and was forced to use one for a few of my classes... I always felt like it was fighting me every step of the way. I think that had more to do with my unfamiliarity with the OS and it's functions than the system itself (expect for that frustrating pinwheel of death... that wasn't my doing). At that point, I'd been using microsoft opperating systems my entire life.

Anyway, in 2007 when apple launched the iphone, I felt the way that many of the android and PC guys do today. What was the point of it? Who would be stupid enough to buy an apple phone? They're all sheep. You're getting scammed out of your money. (rinse and repeat). I was VERY closed minded.

A good friend of mine ended up buying one (he'd been using apples for quite a while at that point and I would let him know it any chance I got :D) and about a week later, at our weekly poker game, I finally got my hands on it and was blown away by it. I had never used a phone that had that large of a screen, was able to get access to the full internet and the countless other features that were a first (or the first time someone got the feature 'right' atleast) for a cellphone.

A week later, I decided to ditch my current phone at the time and went to AT&T to sign up for a new iphone. Once jailbreaking hit the scene, I started learning (by choice and by necessity) more about the file system, OS's and apples software in general. Since I couldn't stand to use itunes on my windows PC, I dual booted OSx86 so I could run iTunes inside of OSX (and sync my phone that way). After using it for a while (and many many frustrating hours re-learning how to do things that we're second nature in Windows/DOS) I started to understand why some people liked the interface and the company in general. Some of the choices that the designers and engineers felt very well thought out and intuitive. It was a lot more simplified... but in a good way. I didn't feel like I was needlessly jumping through hoops to do basic stuff (something that windows 7 really improved upon).

It's now 2011... I've been using iOS (and OSx to some extent) for close to 4 years. I would never buy a mac desktop machine as I enjoy putting computers together myself, but I'm also a LOT more open minded than I used to be. Apple electronics are honestly some of the best built gadgets that's I've ever owned or used. The fit & finish, build quality and materials really is second to none and that is the reason why I would buy apple over another computer manufacturer (dell, hp, emachines, etc)... the price difference is worth what you're getting out of it IMO.
 
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I've never owned an apple computer (outside of an old and tired, used, G5 desktop... that I sold to friend soon after buying it), but if I ever purchased a laptop, it would probably be an apple. I'll explain below.

I used to be the anti-apple, PC or nothing, guy... I LOATHED apple. I went to school for graphic design and was forced to use one for a few of my classes... I always felt like it was fighting me every step of the way. I think that had more to do with my unfamiliarity with the OS and it's functions than the system itself (expect for that frustrating pinwheel of death... that wasn't my doing). At that point, I'd been using microsoft opperating systems my entire life.

Anyway, in 2007 when apple launched the iphone, I felt the way that many of the android and PC guys do today. What was the point of it? Who would be stupid enough to buy an apple phone? They're all sheep. You're getting scammed out of your money. (rinse and repeat). I was VERY closed minded.

A good friend of mine ended up buying one (he'd been using apples for quite a while at that point and I would let him know it any chance I got :D) and about a week later, at our weekly poker game, I finally got my hands on it and was blown away by it. I had never used a phone that had that large of a screen, was able to get access to the full internet and the countless other features that we're a first (or the first time someone got the feature 'right' atleast) for a cellphone.

A week later, I decided to ditch my current phone at the time and went to AT&T to sign up for a new iphone. Once jailbreaking hit the scene, I started learning (by choice and by necessity) more about the file system, OS's and apples software in general. Since I couldn't stand to use itunes on my windows PC, I dual booted OSx86 so I could run iTunes inside of OSX (and sync my phone that way). After using it for a while (and many many frustrating hours re-learning how to do things that we're second nature in Windows/DOS) I started to understand why some people liked the interface and the company in general. Some of the choices that the designers and engineers felt very well thought out and intuitive. It was a lot more simplified... but in a good way. I didn't feel like I was needlessly jumping through hoops to do basic stuff (something that windows 7 really improved upon).

It's now 2011... I've been using iOS (and OSx to some extent) for close to 4 years. I would never buy a mac desktop machine as I enjoy putting computers together myself, but I'm also a LOT more open minded than I used to be. Apple electronics are honestly some of the best built gadgets that's I've ever owned or used. The fit & finish, build quality and materials really is second to none and that is the reason why I would buy apple over another computer manufacturer (dell, hp, emachines, etc)... the price difference is worth what you're getting out of it IMO.

With Laptops, you're not just getting build quality... you're getting a trackpad that is unparalleled (other laptops feel like stone age devices in comparison), incredible screens from 11" - 17" (god forbid Lenovo gives a you screen with a brightness over 200 nit or halfway decent contrast), lightweight, and incredible battery life. No one can complain about power since the highest end Quad cores are in the 15" and 13" has fast dual cores.

Buying a non-Apple Laptop would be like going to a Ford Mustang from a Lexus or Mercedes, we're well aware of how fast your Mustang is going to be, but it isn't even close to being in the same realm.
 
I just hate it when people, who consider themselves as "Experts" in computers, accuse Apple customers to be stupid and dumb...

Where did you get the idea about people having to know a "LOT" about computers. The reason why they are not "Experts" in computers is simply because they are "Experts" in other things in life, which may be more important than being a computer geek....

wow did you really just pull the "i have a life card" ... for some, maybe many of us, being a computer geek makes us a lot of money and keeps the world that you enjoy going round.

geez ...

and i was pretty hammered when i wrote that last night
 
I have a black macbook and the current iPhone on VZW. I can say that it has excellent reliability, clean look, great and stable OSX and best of all it has great resale value!!
 
I'll give you my reasons:

Build quality: IMO nobody beats apple, some lenovos, and business line Hp's get close, but nobody beats them.

The touchpad: Oh god the touchpad

Combo Battery Life/Speed: Nobody else matches the battery life of Apple with the Power that apples get, I will admit, this is almost exclusively due to:

OSX: I get all the advantages of Linux, w/o the PITA headaches of Linux, oh yeah, and dedicated, driver support that is very focused on making everything as seemless, and stable as possible, while having the lowest power draw.
 
I buy and use Apple products so that I don't stand out when I go to Starbucks.
 
With Laptops, you're not just getting build quality... you're getting a trackpad that is unparalleled (other laptops feel like stone age devices in comparison), incredible screens from 11" - 17" (god forbid Lenovo gives a you screen with a brightness over 200 nit or halfway decent contrast), lightweight, and incredible battery life. No one can complain about power since the highest end Quad cores are in the 15" and 13" has fast dual cores.

Buying a non-Apple Laptop would be like going to a Ford Mustang from a Lexus or Mercedes, we're well aware of how fast your Mustang is going to be, but it isn't even close to being in the same realm.

I disagree. I never use the trackpad EVER. The nice thing about mac notebooks is they are thin and light but that says nothing about the build quality. From the exterior they look nice, but using your example they are putting a POS ford escort motor in a Mercedes body.

I have 2 major issues with macs. 1st is that I had an iPod touch and being forced to use itunes sucks ass. I will never do it again. 2nd is I could never justifying over $1000 more on the price tag of a MBP for the same hardware as any other notebook, regardless of how thin and pretty it looks.
 
I don't buy Apple products. I won a iPod Nano in a contest once and used that for awhile. My girlfriend bought me an iPod Touch for Christmas or my birthday, something like that. Other than these two items I've never really owned any Apple products. And the ones I did own, I didn't pay for.
 
With Laptops, you're not just getting build quality... you're getting a trackpad that is unparalleled (other laptops feel like stone age devices in comparison), incredible screens from 11" - 17" (god forbid Lenovo gives a you screen with a brightness over 200 nit or halfway decent contrast), lightweight, and incredible battery life. No one can complain about power since the highest end Quad cores are in the 15" and 13" has fast dual cores.

Buying a non-Apple Laptop would be like going to a Ford Mustang from a Lexus or Mercedes, we're well aware of how fast your Mustang is going to be, but it isn't even close to being in the same realm.

I actually HATE the mac trackpad. Hate it. Macbooks are nice and all. Not arguing that. But you can also get other quality machines. And I am waiting on the imac refresh. Hell I was up to 2am hitting refresh on the apple store because it was done for adding the white iphone. I was just hopeful they would have refreshed the imacs at the same time.

And about your car analogy, mercedes reliability has been slipping and is now ranked behind Dodge. However Ford is currently ranked above Toyota in reliability and the build quality has improved by leaps and bounds.

However image and perception are sometimes in a different place than reality.
 
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I'll never buy an Apple computer. I much prefer the Windows environment and flexibility(being able to use almost any piece of hardware out on the market, games, etc) of it.

However, many of you know that I'm pretty anti Apple, but I loved my iPhone when I had it and I HATE the Android OS with a passion(what a bloated, over hyped piece of shit). Also, my iPad is nice. Some things REALLY, REALLY fucking annoy me about it, but it's good enough that I can live with it.

I'll buy their moble devices, but never one of their PCs.
 
I was using my bothers ipad2 the other day, will be getting one for the wife :)
the stuff is not cheap, but the quality and presentation is incredible
 
"Wasting"... Waisting is related to the waist.

There are no better options than Macbooks, simply put. You want higher clock hertz, I prefer a better screen. You want more GPU power, I want 10 hours of battery life or more.

I used to own a ton of PC Notebooks, then you grow up and you realize half the things you don't need (gaming capability) you are able to get get and all the things you do want now (build quality, screen quality, mobility, etc) you can only get in a Mac.

My Dell laptop(I have an actual laptop incase I need to do something with Flash) is very fast CPU/GPU AND has over 8 hours of battery life with a 17 inch screen on full brightness, and looks just as good as yours. And it was cheaper than the cheapest Mac.

Your argument is invalid(to me).
 
My Dell laptop(I have an actual laptop incase I need to do something with Flash) is very fast CPU/GPU AND has over 8 hours of battery life with a 17 inch screen on full brightness, and looks just as good as yours. And it was cheaper than the cheapest Mac.

Your argument is invalid(to me).

As i said, If it suits you, stick to it:D...Dell just left a bad taste in my mouth, Their Ultrasharp monitors seem good though
 
I had a macbook unibody and I was lazy to learn the whole OSx thing and so Sold it locally. It's a nice laptop and build quality is remarkable. I will someday get one of the macbook air instead, but for now, I have an iPad and iPhone only. Reason having these? Even my 2 yr old daughter can operate an iPad and watch netflix or movies. Simple and it works.

But I'm eyeing that Asus eepad transformer :) that seems pretty decent tablet and affordable.
 
"Wasting"... Waisting is related to the waist.

Guess I just lost the spelling bee, god forbid at 1:00 a.m. after many drinks I add an extra i. :rolleyes:


Anyways, thank you to everyone that added to the thread with valid points, for both sides. Looks like I'm going to have to try that godlike touch pad, and see what all the fuss is about. I'm going to install a copy of OSX in a virtual environment and see how well I can get along with it, then see how it goes from there.
 
Oh, I had one more question for you MBP users, how is the battery life (I know a lot of you said good), I'm looking for real numbers. How long does it work when just browsing, heavy use, and how long of a life does the battery have before degrading to a significantly lower uptime. My Fujistu s7110 had anywhere from 5-6 hours on average, and when I put in the second battery I can get 11+ (with average computing no real hard work), Although I did have to replace the primary battery after a few years.
 
Oh, I had one more question for you MBP users, how is the battery life (I know a lot of you said good), I'm looking for real numbers. How long does it work when just browsing, heavy use, and how long of a life does the battery have before degrading to a significantly lower uptime. My Fujistu s7110 had anywhere from 5-6 hours on average, and when I put in the second battery I can get 11+ (with average computing no real hard work), Although I did have to replace the primary battery after a few years.

I have a 2010 13" MBP. With heavy gaming/video/coding I get a solid 5 hours. With casual web surfing and document editing it's closer to 8. What they advertise is fairly accurate.

I think I read somewhere that you're MBP battery should perform at 80% after 3 years. Seems realistic if you have a good battery and actually discharge it regularly.
 
I've had very realistic battery life but my MBP is only a few months old. If you want to run OS X virtually you'll need to do hack it, there's quite a few guides online.
 
I have a 2010 13" MBP. With heavy gaming/video/coding I get a solid 5 hours. With casual web surfing and document editing it's closer to 8. What they advertise is fairly accurate.

I think I read somewhere that you're MBP battery should perform at 80% after 3 years. Seems realistic if you have a good battery and actually discharge it regularly.

Thats great life with encoding, and gaming wow. I could only get that kind of life doing that work with a second battery installed.
 
Doing so as I type this, Thanks guys.

just a heads up for you, you wont be able to use accelerated hardware under a virtual machine of macOS. If you want to get the most out of it, I highly suggest using an old HDD and booting the OS nativly with an EFI emulator
 
style
build quality
extras (backlit keyboard, trackpad, quality displays, etc)
size

When I bought mine it had the same specs as the Dell Studio XPSM1330, but was lighter, thinner, had twice the trackpad, and was cheaper after free ipod and $100 printer (which I sold). The thing has held up for two years wonderfully. I'm not going to go spend $2.5K on a 15" for gaming, that would be dumb. But for certain applications, other brands can't touch Apple.
 
There is no good reason for people to like Apple Macs better than the PC. When you ask Apple groupies, you always get really *vague and subjective explanations, or **factually false explanations. PCs cost less, are more powerful, run a lot more software, allow you to buy from multiple manufacturers, etc. The same is true of iPhone vs. Android. Apple did get a jump on the tablet market, but if you want a better tablet at a lower price, iPad isn't it.

Consider, iPhone users use the internet a lot less than Android users. That tells me something about usability of the iPhone vs. Android (or, about the mental ability of their users).

People like Apple because it's what they see on TV and the movies. It's the cool thing, like ***Pet Rocks use to be. And if you go to Apple for a phone, you get to choose from among one products, the iPhone. A no-brainer for someone with no brains (at least until they're asked how much memory they want).

* "The touchpad: Oh god the touchpad"

** "There are no better options than Macbooks, simply put. You want higher clock hertz, I prefer a better screen. You want more GPU power, I want 10 hours of battery life or more."

*** "I buy and use Apple products so that I don't stand out when I go to Starbucks."
 
There is no good reason for people to like Apple Macs better than the PC. When you ask Apple groupies, you always get really *vague and subjective explanations, or **factually false explanations. PCs cost less, are more powerful, run a lot more software, allow you to buy from multiple manufacturers, etc. The same is true of iPhone vs. Android. Apple did get a jump on the tablet market, but if you want a better tablet at a lower price, iPad isn't it.

Consider, iPhone users use the internet a lot less than Android users. That tells me something about usability of the iPhone vs. Android (or, about the mental ability of their users).

People like Apple because it's what they see on TV and the movies. It's the cool thing, like ***Pet Rocks use to be. And if you go to Apple for a phone, you get to choose from among one products, the iPhone. A no-brainer for someone with no brains (at least until they're asked how much memory they want).

* "The touchpad: Oh god the touchpad"

** "There are no better options than Macbooks, simply put. You want higher clock hertz, I prefer a better screen. You want more GPU power, I want 10 hours of battery life or more."

*** "I buy and use Apple products so that I don't stand out when I go to Starbucks."

This is factually 100% false. I've owned more computers and laptops than you probably will in a lifetime. Going forward, I don't bother with non-Apple systems (Except I still build my own Desktop PCs, see sig) or electronics. They never cease to disappoint.
 
First and main reason... outstanding customer service. The entire experience of the Apple Store, their tech support, everything is in a class of its own. I've never been treated better by a company than I have been with Apple.

Examples being: First gen iPhone... the screen stopped working about a month or two before the 3GS was due to come out... half the screen just wouldn't respond to touch. Bring it to the Apple Store, and no questions, not under warranty (it was even jailbroken!)... 15 minutes later I'm out the store with a nice new iPhone. On my last MacBook Pro, the optical drive stopped working, brought it to the Apple Store, a few hours later it had a brand new optical drive, keyboard, and chasis. You can't beat that.

Another reason is speed and stability. Without a doubt there are faster graphics chips, sure, and I would never claim that Mac's were good for gaming (though Valve is doing a great job with optimization). But in pure raw speed and stability, you can't beat OS X. I work as a tech assistant in a premier video production company in the heart of NYC. We have an entire room of about 15 Mac Pro's connected over fiber optics via a TerraBlock, our server is an Xserve, etc. These machines are pumping out 2k and 4k renders nearly 24/7.

We have 4 edit rooms that used to run Avid on PCs from HP that were officially offered and supported by Avid. To say they crashed was an understatement. They were the cause of about 70-80 percent of our trouble tickets last year. Crashes, fiber channel issues, etc, it was a disaster. We finally switched them out for Mac Pro's and I can't think of one reason I'd be in the edit rooms for anything other than applying a patch (which I can do from Apple's phenomenal Remote Desktop software).

Another reason is their design. Some people would say Apple products are designed for form over function, but anyone who spends a significant amount of time with computers and gadgets from both camps can not deny the amount of thought put into Apple's designs. From the invisible battery meter on the side of my MacBook Pro that only makes itself visible when I press a button, to the power supply for that Mac. From the modular HDD sleds in their Mac Pro's (in fact EVERYTHING in the Mac Pro is modular), to the seamless Smart Covers on the iPad 2. Everything they design is designed for a reason, not just for looks.

I didn't use to be a Mac guy. I used to build my own gaming PCs, and follow up on the latest chip sets, graphics cards, etc. But I've grown out of that... who has time for such frivolous things?

Also, I don't know where you've gotten the "have to upgrade every year" thing... There is of course a certain group of people who would do that... I call them people with too much money. My uncle, for instance, sells his MacBook Pro's every 6 months when new models come out.

Though this does bring up a great point... resale value. What happens when you do want to upgrade? We have old G5 Mac's here that we have sold for a few hundred bucks a piece. And my old MacBook Pro from 2007 (right before they announced the fancy Unibody aluminum ones) sold for nearly a grand, when I paid 1200 for it! This was LAST YEAR.

Other things I love, the OS is beautiful, smooth, and very tweakable. Time Machine (I have yet to see any backup system for Windows that's as robust and effortless at the same time). The extremely dedicated third party developers (are there any dev's like bjango, Agile, or Panic on the PC?)... All sorts of things.

They're not perfect... still very expensive (but with the iPad, I'm shocked to find they're the price leader STILL), they're very private (I'd love to make my purchases based on knowledge of your products release road map, rather than the Mac Buyers Guide), and sometimes their most popular products get the least amount of love (they've had how long now to smooth out iTunes? And when are we going to see updates to DVD Studio Pro and Compressor?). Also, Mac users get made fun of by elitists, which is never fun (hey we're all computer users who know to come to [H], can't we all get along?).

Overall I can't think of a better reason for choosing Apple other than their slogan... they just work. They just work for advanced IT users like myself, they just work for my parents who loved switching from their aging virus-infested PC to a Mac Mini (my mom loves working in iPhoto and subjecting us to slideshows on her Apple TV [airplay FTW!]), they just work in a professional environment, and they just work in a graphics, video, and sound design environment.

Oh, and the trackpad on the Macbook Pro's are bar none the best in the business.
 
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PCs cost less
Some PCs cost less. Others cost more.

PCs are more powerful
Some PCs are more powerful. Others are less powerful.

PCs run a lot more software
Macs can run OS X applications, Windows applications, Linux/UNIX applications or any application on any x86 operating system that isn't contingent on a hardware device that is for some reason non-functional on Macs.

Consider, iPhone users use the internet a lot less than Android users. That tells me something about usability of the iPhone vs. Android (or, about the mental ability of their users).
iPhone users spend significantly more time using apps than they do browsing with Safari. This tells you something about the state of applications available for the iPhone and how users prefer them to using a web browser.
 
There is no good reason for people to like Apple Macs better than the PC. When you ask Apple groupies, you always get really *vague and subjective explanations, or **factually false explanations. PCs cost less, are more powerful, run a lot more software, allow you to buy from multiple manufacturers, etc. The same is true of iPhone vs. Android. Apple did get a jump on the tablet market, but if you want a better tablet at a lower price, iPad isn't it.

Consider, iPhone users use the internet a lot less than Android users. That tells me something about usability of the iPhone vs. Android (or, about the mental ability of their users).

People like Apple because it's what they see on TV and the movies. It's the cool thing, like ***Pet Rocks use to be. And if you go to Apple for a phone, you get to choose from among one products, the iPhone. A no-brainer for someone with no brains (at least until they're asked how much memory they want).

* "The touchpad: Oh god the touchpad"

** "There are no better options than Macbooks, simply put. You want higher clock hertz, I prefer a better screen. You want more GPU power, I want 10 hours of battery life or more."

*** "I buy and use Apple products so that I don't stand out when I go to Starbucks."

Some PCs cost less. Others cost more.


Some PCs are more powerful. Others are less powerful.


Macs can run OS X applications, Windows applications, Linux/UNIX applications or any application on any x86 operating system that isn't contingent on a hardware device that is for some reason non-functional on Macs.


iPhone users spend significantly more time using apps than they do browsing with Safari. This tells you something about the state of applications available for the iPhone and how users prefer them to using a web browser.

Owned. oh and...

I FREAKING LOVE THE TRACKPAD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I triple dog dare you to find a better one anywhere.
 
Serios, the trackpads are far and away the best out there.

When shopping for a new W7 laptop for my wife I tried everything under the sun. They all fucking blow compared to the Apple trackpads.
 
*vague and subjective explanations

* "The touchpad: Oh god the touchpad"

Since you've decided to quote me here, I'll elaborate.

I can use the touchpad with a single finger, 2 finger gestures, 3 finger gestures, 4 finger gestures, multi-touch on a PC doesn't exist at anything CLOSE to the same level as for a Mac right now. HP tried to implement it on the Envy, and came close to the first-gen multi-touch that apple stopped using years ago.

I have a gesture that scroll up/down, left/right, refreshes the page in Chrome, etc. I have 10 specific multi-touch gestures I use in illustrator, etc. None of this is possible on a PC at all.

The "vague and subjective explanation" is due simply to how powerful, and customizable that the touchpad is. A feature that has no comparison in the PC world.

As for the rest of your rabidly-anti-mac hate, why oh why, would you even bother clicking on the Apple forums if you're so rabidly anti-mac.
 
I believe he may have mistakenly read the thread title as "Why do you not buy Apple products?".
 
As for the rest of your rabidly-anti-mac hate, why oh why, would you even bother clicking on the Apple forums if you're so rabidly anti-mac.

Methinks thou doth protest too much.

Anyway, singing the praises of a touchpad because of gestures? I can program a PC touchpad with any gestures I like. But, even the best touchpad is no match for a mouse.
 
Edit: Not trolling, just really want to see why I should invest in the product, I have many frineds that use them, and I have yet to come by a good reason. Is it just like the cigarette brand no reason why but it tastes better?

Why do you buy Apple products?

Why do you have to upgrade for every new option, the options that should and would have came with it, if it were not for them omitting them to coerce you into upgrading for the same product you already have. Not trying to troll here, just really curious to what is the motive behind what I see as waisting your money on a locked down product that you have to upgrade every 6 months. Has it to do with the trendy nature of the product that makes it cool at the moment, like some skinny jeans? Or, does the product really increase your productivity so much that it will justify the huge chunk of money you have to shell out just to own/upgrade a Mac.

I understand the "need" for photographers to use Apple product(I think), but with the modern PC's power, and the vast amount of software out there, I'm sure there is a better (and faster) option than a Mac. If I am wrong please correct me, so I can adjust my opinion to better my own computing experience.

There are good things about Macs, they are well built... The G5 and mac pros have really nice aluminum cases.

Though I just bought the case used, plan to stick my PC in it :D
 
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