Jaded Scribe said:
First and foremost, the display of colors on a Mac is better, and closer to what you'll see when you print.
Second, is that Mac used a variety of psychologists in the development of features to make working with a mac more intuitive for non-techies to use, particularly for artists.
Adobe and Apple have a love/hate relationship, but the simple matter is that their products (which are at the forefront of the various arts industries) run much better on a Mac.
There is a lot of very good hardware compatibilities and tools not widely available on PC.
That all seems wrong and unsubstantiated.
Colour: http://don.blogs.smugmug.com/2007/02/14/this-is-your-mac-on-drugs/
"Turns out the right sRGB profile isn?t included by default on the Mac"
lol...
"The PC is a soldier. When Direktor Gates demands color #e3823c, PC responds ?Sir, Yes Sir!!? Color #e3823c looks identical on the PC whether it?s in a JPEG, GIF, PNG, CSS, or HTML.
The Mac Thinks Different. Color #e3823c is different on Macs. Except sometimes"
Sounds really reliable and useful for everything...
I think psychologists were more involved in the marketing campaign and product design than interface design and use - I mean, you have a single bar to hold all your program icons otherwise you have to browse through the file structure, and when you mouse over one it goes all big n stuff. Minimised windows go onto the same bar, crammed onto the end beside the bin - Mum couldn't find them whilst she can use a PC just fine. Gogo psychologists.
Photoshop and flash run crap on Macs compared to PCs, I can say from personal experience. I've had state-of-the-art Macs crash repeatedly trying to handle flash videos I've been making whilst my four-year-old desktop had no issues with the same files. And no, the files were started on the Mac, so there's no compatibility issues there. I've found photoshop to run slower, have more crashes and to be unable to handle as large files - that last count probably because I put enough ram into my computer when I built it.
Hardware-wise, I'd direct you to my rant halfway down page 2 about Apples successful attempts to stop me putting a CD onto an iPod. Windows 7 plug and plays with... well, everything. I doubt very much you could plug half as much hardware into a Mac and have it work straight up as you could on my PC.
What hardware tools are you talking about? Screwdrivers? Fan control units?