Well it would be great if they could just not nerf the battery with every software update, I think thats mean.
Fuck Israel
Last edited by uziq (2022-04-13 04:55:05)
Yeah agree, it's a shame they stopped using Intel chips though.SuperJail Warden wrote:
My job gave us MacBooks Airs. The MacBook won me over and if I ever buy a laptop it will be an Apple one. The "Apple products are overpriced for what you get!" that was common around here in like 2008 really showed the age of the members. Apple products don't seem exceptionally expensive once you start making grown up money.
The reliability improvements of tech made over the last few decades doesn't get the attention it deserves. I see kids smacking and dropping their cellphones and Chromebooks all over the place and the things keep on ticking like nothing happened. Meanwhile I still wince if I drop my phone.
Yes, I did say they aren't used for work anymore. Also yes to most of that, my point was that I have had experience with Windows PCs that have lasted way longer than half a decade, and well beyond expected lifespan, driver/Windows support or whatever. A response to what mfg will give you an operating time like that, well, a lot apparently, not to take away from Apple or anything. I'm still in the mood for a break from Windows.uziq wrote:
yeah, there's no way you're doing day-to-day work on a 1990s windows laptop anymore.
i'm not talking about them barely still working and booting up. i'm talking about them being good to go as your main machine 5+ years later.
almost every windows machine i've had has gone to the computer seniors' home where driver errors, BSODs, software incompatibilities, general slowdowns, etc, have gummed up their joints beyond any use. the last desktop PC i built suffered a power supply issue after 1 year ffs. i know it's the fault of the individual component/manufacturer rather than the platform (obviously), but ffs, the level of hassle and troubleshooting with windows machines/bespoke custom 1337 gam3r gear in general is a continual blight.
apple's gear just lasts longer and is much more stable and reliable, imo. i have never had to reformat a machine or take it into a store because something stopped working. never had to deal with days wasted with hairpulling troubleshooting because something randomly fucked up.
a few of my friends have got the latest 16-inch MBP now, with the M1 (M2?) chip. support has come a long ways in the last year or so for the apple cores. without question the jump away from intel-based designs to their own chip has been the biggest disruption/change in their machines for a decade+.Dauntless wrote:
Yeah agree, it's a shame they stopped using Intel chips though.SuperJail Warden wrote:
My job gave us MacBooks Airs. The MacBook won me over and if I ever buy a laptop it will be an Apple one. The "Apple products are overpriced for what you get!" that was common around here in like 2008 really showed the age of the members. Apple products don't seem exceptionally expensive once you start making grown up money.
The reliability improvements of tech made over the last few decades doesn't get the attention it deserves. I see kids smacking and dropping their cellphones and Chromebooks all over the place and the things keep on ticking like nothing happened. Meanwhile I still wince if I drop my phone.
I've got the last Intel MacBook Pro and boot into Windows for most of my work, I know you can use Parallels etc on the Apple chips but it's annoying having to run Windows as a VM
blight or bloat, yes. my comments were in response to dilbert's 'a shame they slowdown and cripple their stuff with every software update' remark, anyway. there's no way apple are worse culprits for this than windows or any of the laptop manufacturers like HP/Dell/Alienware/etc. every single apple device i have owned has been a steady daily-driver for 6+ years and has never caused me any fuss or worry about software updates or slowdowns. the whole OS and environment is remarkably stable.Blight is a good word for Windows Update and its approximation for stuff when individual component mfgs discontinue driver updates.
Last edited by uziq (2022-04-13 17:31:53)
Can you day to day work on a 1990s Mac laptop?uziq wrote:
yeah, there's no way you're doing day-to-day work on a 1990s windows laptop anymore.
i'm not talking about them barely still working and booting up. i'm talking about them being good to go as your main machine 5+ years later.
i never said 1990s, that was newbie. my post literally said "they are good to go as your main machine 5+ years later". learn to read, dearest.Dilbert_X wrote:
Can you day to day work on a 1990s Mac laptop?uziq wrote:
yeah, there's no way you're doing day-to-day work on a 1990s windows laptop anymore.
i'm not talking about them barely still working and booting up. i'm talking about them being good to go as your main machine 5+ years later.
Windows 'updates' are indeed a problem, best thing is to turn them off. My XP box seems to have run fine without them for years.
Last edited by uziq (2022-04-13 21:27:18)
Last edited by pirana6 (2022-04-14 13:48:27)
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2022-04-14 13:53:58)
You can find 20 pages of criticism for every windows operating system.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
There's like 20 page downs of summary on wikipedia. You can find entire, lengthy threads on reddit.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism … dows_Vista
As a linux fanboy myself, if MS decides to be a punk about any hardware Ubuntu goes on. If it's a windows machine I'm likely doing two things: Web browsing and games. If the hardware is too old to game anyway then all I need is the web and on goes Linux.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
XP users have had more years to tint their rose glasses. Some of the OS's greatest defenders I've talked to about it have themselves not used it since support was discontinued.
I think after the black eye MS got from Vista, a warm glow was as much as could be hoped for 7. I went straight to that from XP, and then to 10 from there. This PC will have seen its third OS in Windows 11 if it were at all compatible. Very reminiscent of Vista. "lol ur hardware is old" MS shills from tech forums.
e: It's sad to me that the most that can be hoped for from a company with resources like Microsoft is "adequate." Have you ever even seen a commercial for Windows 11?
No but in fairness I honestly can't tell you the last commercial I've seen for OS-software, be it windows or macOS. I would gawk in awe at a Monterey commercial telling me to upgrade my Big Sur laptop.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
e: It's sad to me that the most that can be hoped for from a company with resources like Microsoft is "adequate." Have you ever even seen a commercial for Windows 11?
8 pagedowns for XP's Wiki article. My point is that there are plenty of valid complaints about Vista, especially from the standpoint of an XP upgrade. Suddenly your stuff doesn't work, mired in driver issues, runs more slowly as the very basics of it. The experience of a new desktop/laptop built with Vista in mind, running programs designed especially for it, was probably far less painful until the USB stick you bought from Office Depot or something wouldn't work.SuperJail Warden wrote:
You can find 20 pages of criticism for every windows operating system.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
There's like 20 page downs of summary on wikipedia. You can find entire, lengthy threads on reddit.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism … dows_Vista