thegreatluke said:
You can NEVER fairly compare prices between a PC and a Mac for several reasons.
a) Macs are generally made with higher-quality materials rather than cheap plastics.
Hahaha... and that's why the MacBooks are turning yellow
😉
b) Macs have a lot of R+D put into them to make sure they're sleek, stylish and beautiful.
To some degree, yes. But there are a lot of attractive VAIOs as well.
c) Most companies offer substandard RAM. For example, when I was trying to match RAM while comparing a MBP to a Gateway, the Gateway only offered 533 MHz RAM while the Core Duo is supposed to use 633 MHz RAM.
Uhhh... the cost of 533/667 mhz ram is really not much difference. Maybe $20. So I think I can pretty easily compare. And no, the Core Duo is not SUPPOSED to get "633". The chipset supports either. I'm running my MBP w/ 533mhz ram.
d) The screens rarely match up. 14.1" or 14.2" is okay, but most of the time they're something like 1280x768 resolution rather than 1440x1028 and sometimes they're not even widescreen! Most screens aren't nearly as bright or as true-to-life as Macs have.
I'm not sure you know what you're talking about here. I do love my MBP screen, but you seem to have no idea what's going on. 14.1" displays are normally 1280x800, whereas 14" displays are 1280x768. Either way, it's not that much diffference. I'd be happy if my stupid MBP would support a 1920x1200 display... but it doesn't.
d) There are extras on a Mac. Lots of them. iLife is worth a lot, as well as iSight, the infrared remote and receiver, Front Row, the battery-life button on the batteries of laptops and MagSafe all add value to your Mac.
Worth a lot to who? Some people might get a lot of value out of it, sure, but to me they're just novelties. I've used iLife maybe 3 times total (and only iPhoto). iMovie just doesn't seem interesting to me... iWeb is a joke for a real developer... and iTunes is free. There are IR receivers on most laptops. The remote is kind of pointless because you're using a laptop (*gasp* I mean "notebook"). The battery life button is yet another pointless feature, and I find myself annoyed with the MagSafe most of the time.
e) There are many built-in features in Mac OS X that people don't think of to buy but WILL need down the road. Virus protection*, ad-ware/spy-ware removers*, registry cleaners*, disk burning, firewalls, media software, iLife-like software and some of the equivalents of the free applications Macs come with (Quicken, etc.)
Mac OS X doesn't have virus protection or adware protection. Microsoft provides free adware programs... Disk burning is built into Windows. So is a firewall and media software. I'd rather not even use iLife-like software (though Windows Movie Maker is included w/ MCE) and I don't believe Macs come with Quicken...
f) Most PC users wouldn't think that they'd have to spend money later in the computer's life as something breaks or dies. Macs are hardy machines and can take a LOT of abuse.
I've opened my Mac like 10 times and now the upper case is peeling apart. A lot of abuse my butt. I've been a PC user for 21 years and I've had less wrong with my Compaq and Vaio in their whole life-span than I did with my MBP the day after I bought it.
*I figured this is necessary to try to match the PC and the Mac as close as possible, so figure both computers wouldn't have these problems. And don't even try to pull that free app made by some 8 year old crap.
And, of course... It Just Works.
A computer with Windows installed by default does not have viruses, adware, or any other problems. It's the user that's too stupid. You can't add random costs in because some users are stupid. That's like saying high insurance rates should be added to Honda Civics because more people crash them (more people drive them -- in case you didn't know).
And don't bash 8 year old kids that are obviously quite a bit brighter than you.