kimmiewon wrote:I am just starting my degree in computer science and am having a hard time deciding to buy a new pc or mac. There are very strong opinions either way. The school supports pc's but, I don't want to limit my possibilities with just using one OS. Any information you could offer would be greatly appreciated.
Ok, I couldn't help but pipe in here.
As the main administrator for macscripter.net, you should know that I will probably have a biased viewpoint. :>)
To make things clear, what a lot of the statistics don't tell you is, exactly where that 2-5% really is.
The Macintosh userbase is predomiently in the Graphics/Prepress market, where the Mac holds a solid 99% market share. While there will certainly be Billy Boxes in those environments, much of the time it is purely to open up and convert MicroSoft Punisher .... er, uh ... 'Publisher' files - and even then only to convert them so they print correctly on ImageSetters.
That was around 18 years ago, and that still holds true today. With one huge exception, and that is the advent of OSX. With OSX, you get so much built right in. php/mysql/perl/mach kernal and all is right there when you purchase your machine. I might also add that there are a *lot* of linux people migrating to OSX, because it offers so much for them out of the box.
As per programming and development, you might be surprised to know that Xcode is entirely free [the developers tools cd ships with each new mac or is included in the software upgrade purchase], so this suite of development tools is what everyone has been pining for. If you wish to develop for both Mac and PC [as well as linux] you can also purchase Real Basic, which has wonderful compilers for those platforms. With the next release of OSX Tiger, this development environment will only get better with Xcode 2.0 and Automator.
Since I'm a fanatic about Applescript in general, just know that applescript in general be be used as a 'glue' to allow you to do all kinds of things, that are just not available on the PC.
While it might not be as important to some, OSX does have a very clean GUI, and it's quite intuitive. There is so much more about OSX that is beyond the scope of this thread. But I can safely tell you that you will have a *lot* more fun developing for the Mac than PC bar none.
I am sure there will be others here who will take issue with my statement, but after working on both platforms for some time myself, I know I wouldn't give it a second thought in purchasing a Mac over a PC any day. :>)
If you think about it for a moment, one of the reasons why the PC market is such as it is has more to do with saturation of the market place than anything else. PC manufacturers don't own the Operating System, Microsoft does. That is the primary reason why PC's are so cheap, as there are many companies that make machines with Intel on the Inside. Please don't make the assumption the the PC is better just because there are so many of them around running Windows.
Here is another example. In a given setting, think of those secretaries who use MS Word, Excel, and PowerPoint all day long ... it doesn't take long to realize that is where the largest base of PC's are in use is in the Office place. There is absolutely nothing wrong with that, and I don't blame business owners for making that business decision - it all that person is going to do is run MS Word all day long. On the other hand, please consider the facts and basis for market share, as it's the sector of that market share that really matters most.
My 2 cents. :>)