I've had a Fujitsu, Compaq, Dell, Acer and I finally flipped to the dark side 18 monts ago and bought a Macbook pro 17" with i7 quad 2.2gHz processor, etc, etc. I give mine an absolute hiding using them for hours nearly every day of the year.
Dell was the most robust machine (dropped it numerous times) but they're hard to buy from and strangely really good on after sales service.
Everyone told me Macs were the ants pants for all graphical, photographic, movie work, etc, blah, blah, blah. Have a good look at what the Mac advertisements always promote - it's never wordprocessing, spreadsheets, databases, CAD programmes, work programmes, etc - it's always cool young things sending or posting pics of their latest enviro hiking, canoeing, travelling the world holiday or extreme sport, etc. Cool stuff but not what we do everyday.
And they do tend to be easier to use and the ease of use always seems really cool, once you're used to doing things totally differently. eg you learnt to drive an auto car here and then moved to Europe and had to drive a small manual bus on the other side of a dirt road at night with one headlight. You know you should be able to do it but it takes quite a while to get used to it and to find out how to do things differently.
The Macbook pro also has a very annoying front edge that is quite sharp and not ergonomically nice - should be filed off. Don't know if the Air has this same "feature".
Macs start up amazingly fast, have great battery life and look well built although I've had 3 screws fall out the back of mine and then they quibble over whether its a warranty issue.
Using programmes like Excel and Word etc is also different and there are lots of inefficient keystrokes that are required in osx that aren't required in Windows systems. eg to delete info in cells in Excel in a Windows environment, click on cell and hit delete key. On a Mac, click on cell, hold down function key and hit cell. Multiple cells can be frustrating to delete. Programmes native to Windows aren't exactly the same in Mac osx and take time to learn and are not always as intuitive. There is no backspace key on the Mac so you have to move the cursor and then delete - little frustrations all over the place.
It's also a bit like betting with the devil - you start to lock yourself into the whole Mac world - can only connect iphones to Macs, can't find much freeware, etc unless you run Windows as an alternative operating system (which is a pretty cool option to have up your sleeve). But then you have to buy Windows for around $100+.
Personally, considering the Macs are easily twice the price of the windows machines I'd be looking at two windows machines, one for the kids and one for you unless you're a graphic designer.
My 2 bobs worth - good luck


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