Top Rope Suplex

Learning Life & Programming

Switcher: How I went from using Macs to Vista

Hello, my name is Aaron.  And I’m a PC user.

It feels a little dirty, to be honest.  Yet, somehow, freeing to admit it.  Its one of those things in life that just ort of creeps up on you, and you don’t realize what’s happened until it’s too late.

 I used to be a video producer by trade.  This meant, in the early 2000s, I had no choice but to shout from the rooftops the beauty and elegance of Mac OSX.  Final Cut Pro was the the be all and end all of video editing.  Motion was the quickest program to use.  There was no question; for media creation there is no better suite of tools than the Mac ecosystem.

 But then I got a new job, fresh with benefits and decent pay.  And no longer did I need to create little movies and what not.  And on my desk at work was the boring, cold screen of Windows.  Ah, but at least I had my PowerBook, iMac and Mac desktop at home.  I would never go back to Mac.

Then I found programming.

Everyone around me said, “Use Eclipse.”  But I strayed, I was tempted by the darkside, and I loaded Visual Studio C# Express on my wife’s old laptop.  That was almost a year ago.

Slowly, I began taking her clunky old laptop tp work with me to work on programming during work.  And then XNA came out… the old rusty Windows laptop even came with us on vacation.  I felt like I was cheating on my shiny PowerBook… I mean, the PC was under-powered, had hard drive troubles and was foreer slow.  But Microsoft had seduced me with their tools, great support, and strong community.  I tried to use the PowerBook… I installed Eclipse on it.  But I kept using the laptop instead.

I went to the Vista launch party.  I saw.  And maybe, just maybe, a small part of me said, “Wow.”

Seriously people, I’m a Mac user.  I still have my Mac desktop to do my video editing on.  I still have my PowerBook.  There’s an Apple sticker on my car’s rear window.  I have lead many converts to the ease of use and quality that is Mac products.

But.

(I feel so dirty.)

Vista looks better than Mac OSX.  It runs faster and smoother.  To be honest, I’ve never had a machine render webpages so quickly.  Office 2007 loads in about 3 seconds on my machine.  Yes – my machine.  On launch day, on January 30th I bought myself a new HP laptop (I bought my wife a Sony one, too).  I bought myself a $750 laptop and it runs better than my $1600 PowerBook ever did.  I’m not making this up, seriously.

Microsoft has a great product on their hands with Vista.  For years and years they’ve been teasing us with ideas of convergence; we’re on the cusp of it.  Apple has awakened the sleeping giant that is Microsoft, and their hidden weapons seem to be ready.  Vista, the 360, Windows Home Sever, Live Services…

I am now more than ever interested to see what Mac OSX 10.5 is going to look like.  They have their work cut out for them to best Vista.  I haven’t abandoned OSX.  I just have moved beyond simple fanboy-ism and realized that there are different tools to get different jobs done.  When I want to create media, I will always use a Mac.  When I want to program, I wil probably always use a Windows machine.

Congratualtions Microsoft; you brought a prodigal son home. 

February 3, 2007 - Posted by Aaron | Microsoft, vista | | 3 Comments

3 Comments »

  1. “On launch day, on January 30th I bought myself a new HP laptop (I bought my wife a Sony one, too). I bought myself a $750 laptop and it runs better than my $1600 PowerBook ever did. I’m not making this up, seriously.”

    That’s an unfair comparison — everyone knows that the PowerBooks (and iBooks) were very far behind in the performance department. It didn’t help that IBM couldn’t produce the G5 in a laptop goods that Apple was counting on.

    A better comparison would be between your new laptop and a Core 2 Duo MacBook — sure, there is still a price difference of $350, but I bet the performance would be a hell of a lot better than the PBG4.

    BTW — what are the specs on the HP laptop?

    Comment by dmunsie | February 5, 2007 | Reply

  2. You’re content because you’re afraid.

    Comment by Samsara | February 5, 2007 | Reply

  3. I’ll agree… from a purely technical standpoint it is an unfair comparison. I guess it’s more of an anecdotal thing. I remember being amazed when I bought the PowerBook… but now when I try using it everything on it runs slow. Perhaps it’s that new computer speed.

    I guess my point was that I’ve never been impressed with the speed of a Windows PC. Whether I’ve bought them new or built them, I’ve never just been blown away by such a marked improvement. I really think Vista has a lot to do with the speed (and yes, the fact that it’s a better processor and such doesn’t hurt).

    As to the stats, it’s an AMD Turion 64 X2 w/1GB of ram.

    The biggest complaint I have so far about the laptop is the hard drive speed. I’m used to working on video editing stations, so having to wait for the HDD to find a file is a touch annoying, even if it’s only waiting a second or two.

    Comment by Top Rope Suplex | February 5, 2007 | Reply


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