
Originally Posted by
Delta_Farce
Hey Pete,
You can pick up a second hand PC for under $500 with hefty processor and RAM specs (several on eBay for between $300 and $500). You could run Linux on that and it'd be faster than OSX or Windows with no software costs whatsoever.
If you've got your heart set on the Mac, that's cool, but if you're still looking it's worth considering Linux as an option.
Cheers,
Mark
Linux is not necessarily faster than OS X, or Windows. It is the hardware that facilitates performance, and in the case of the Mac the hardsware and OS are optimised to maximise on that.
I have used Linux since about 1995 and on some machines it is very fast and on others not. It depends on many factors, hardware, what services are running, what windowing manager (if there is one
), etc. But the Linux movement has been pretty much broken since it was forked in 1997 so performance is far from guaranteed and usually it requires the user to optimise their distro for the hardware is gonig to be installed on.
There is a cost to everything you get and one of the major costs on Linux has been the user's time in configuring it. With Windows there are ongoing costs to keep it running, both in time and money. On the Mac you can literally get a new machine, pull it out of the box, plug it in and it will configure itself to suit your local situation. Recently I upgraded my Powerbook to a Macbook Pro. Not only did it configure itself but it also walked me through the process of connecting the two machines (choice of Firewire, USB 2.0, or ethernet - I chose the latter) so it could copy *all* my applications, configurations, files, etc, onto the new machine. Then set them all up so they'd work.
Now, if you want *really free* software you should be looking at the BSDs. FreeBSD is great, OpenBSD is blindingly fast, NetBSD is virtually unbreakable.
Alan
Alan
2005 Disco 2 HSE
1983 Series III Stage 1 V8
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