Actually, Final Cut has been dead for a while, and you will never find any professional who have used it since July. Adobe Premiere is the way to go now, which - also works just as good for PC.SidingWithTheEnemy said:4) For Movies I use iMovie (This one is really good but if not professional, for professionals use FinalCut or equivalent)
So apart from point 5) and maybe 4) there is no real urgency to use a Mac. But it's handy, quite expensive, yes, but handy...
FinalCut exist(ed) for PC as well, didn't it? Anyway, Premiere is a strong candidate for Moviemaking...Dieter Meyer said:Actually, Final Cut has been dead for a while, and you will never find any professional who have used it since July. Adobe Premiere is the way to go now, which - also works just as good for PC.SidingWithTheEnemy said:4) For Movies I use iMovie (This one is really good but if not professional, for professionals use FinalCut or equivalent)
So apart from point 5) and maybe 4) there is no real urgency to use a Mac. But it's handy, quite expensive, yes, but handy...
Although, as a Macbook Pro owner I'll admit that they are overpriced, but when you've bought one you definately wont regret it. Using a PC laptop feels like going back to the stone age *flameshields activated*. I'd never buy a desktop mac, though.
I purchased a top end Mac Pro - dual hexacore, 16GB RAM, 27" LED monitor and 1GB solid state drive. Close to $9k. If you upgrade your ram yourself by buying it third party (and there is absolutely no reason not to given how much easier it is to get at the hardware in a Mac desktop) you avoid a lot of the "Apple tax". Nevertheless, I couldn't be happier. I'm sick of buying a "cheap" PC made with parts that have zero quality control, and spending the first five hours having to scrub the system clean of bloatware. Plus, the aluminum is pretty. So sue me.Dieter Meyer said:Although, as a Macbook Pro owner I'll admit that they are overpriced, but when you've bought one you definately wont regret it. Using a PC laptop feels like going back to the stone age *flameshields activated*. I'd never buy a desktop mac, though.
FinalCut is developed by Apple, and since they are evil(!) it doesnt exist for PC... atleast not legally!SidingWithTheEnemy said:FinalCut exist(ed) for PC as well, didn't it? Anyway, Premiere is a strong candidate for Moviemaking...
Unless prices have gone up for some reason since the last time I checked, you can get a pretty nice 24" one for around $400 if you wait for a sale, but yeah, they're still a lot more expensive than a crappy TN panel. Totally worth it, though.Supernova1138 said:IPS displays are also available for PC, but you have to actively seek them out, to keep costs down most PC monitors don't use IPS, you usually have to look for the $500 and up monitors if you want an IPS panel on PC.
Quoting this because it's an extremely important point regarding your desire to make a website.SenorStocks said:Also, using a Mac wont make you any better at making a website, it's the user, not the tool that matters.
Seriously, nine thousand dollars, are you insane?!AlphaLackey said:I purchased a top end Mac Pro - dual hexacore, 16GB RAM, 27" LED monitor and 1GB solid state drive. Close to $9k.
The Stone Age you say? My ?600,- Windows laptop is more high tech than plenty of the Apple laptops I see on my school.Dieter Meyer said:Although, as a Macbook Pro owner I'll admit that they are overpriced, but when you've bought one you definately wont regret it. Using a PC laptop feels like going back to the stone age *flameshields activated*. I'd never buy a desktop mac, though.
Dell computers are fine as long as you reinstall the OS when you get it. Otherwise you just have to deal with piles of stubborn adware.Zachary Amaranth said:But seriously, Dells are shit. That's likely why it crashed hard.
Given that it was a Mac, I'd say so.Cowabungaa said:Seriously, nine thousand dollars, are you insane?!
To be fair, I'll sound a lot less insane when I get the right suffix on my permanent storage. Presumably my mistake would be obvious since one would not brag about a 1 GB hard drive, but that's 1 TB of solid state drive, (2x 512 GB actually). That right there is close to $3k of it.Cowabungaa said:Seriously, nine thousand dollars, are you insane?!
do you? I upgraded to 7 for less than £70, cheaper than those OSX £90 updates.AlphaLackey said:I purchased a top end Mac Pro - dual hexacore, 16GB RAM, 27" LED monitor and 1GB solid state drive. Close to $9k. If you upgrade your ram yourself by buying it third party (and there is absolutely no reason not to given how much easier it is to get at the hardware in a Mac desktop) you avoid a lot of the "Apple tax". Nevertheless, I couldn't be happier. I'm sick of buying a "cheap" PC made with parts that have zero quality control, and spending the first five hours having to scrub the system clean of bloatware. Plus, the aluminum is pretty. So sue me.Dieter Meyer said:Although, as a Macbook Pro owner I'll admit that they are overpriced, but when you've bought one you definately wont regret it. Using a PC laptop feels like going back to the stone age *flameshields activated*. I'd never buy a desktop mac, though.
One technical reason to favor the Mac Pro: If you do computer programming in C++ that requires hard core multi-processor work (i.e. statistical calculations or random simulations), the libraries that Apple has developed that work natively with multi-core processors (Grand Central Dispatch) are far easier to use than OpenMP and outperform it to boot.
Plus, don't forget that every time you upgrade your OS, you recoup $200 of your Apple tax![]()
I upgraded my OS X for $30 Canadian, which OSX update costs ~$200? None I was aware of.Hoplon said:If you are correct about the programming why do most serious programmers seem to use Linux?