You can't buy Mac clones. That was something marketed in the late 90's. Didn't catch on then and not a good deal now.
Alan
Hi folks!
I have never been able to justify the cost of a Mac over home made clones, so I have no experience with Macs.
My 17 year old son wants to buy his own new P.C. and is tossing the benefits of Mac over clone.
He will do a lot of image and video processing and has a gazzilion songs, videos and stills (HD Video camera, Nikon D60 and 80Gb iPod)!
My experience would point to the Mac for this sort of stuff but, the good old sales dudes are bending his ear towards clones and he won't listen to me (as much as he used to).
So folks, what are your thoughts.
Around $1900.00 is what he's thinking to spend.
Thanks.
You can't buy Mac clones. That was something marketed in the late 90's. Didn't catch on then and not a good deal now.
Alan
Alan
2005 Disco 2 HSE
1983 Series III Stage 1 V8
IBM clones, sorry, never heard of a commercially available Mac clone!
At 17 I was playing a lot of computer games... A mac even with the newest software which says it can do things a windows machine can can't play games a lot of the time. It is the only reason I won't buy another mac as in every other way they were a far nicer machine.
So if he is a gamer-don't go mac. If he has no interest in games they are a far better machine but the truth is $1900 doesn't get you far with them.
In that case, whether you choose to buy a Mac or PC based on how well either platform handles multimedia content is today somewhat irrelevant. Both platforms have a wide range of tools available, both free and non-free. It is much the same for *nix derivatives like Linux too.
In the end the choice is probably better made according to how familiar the user is with any particular platform.
All multimedia applications require some level of skill and will probably also demand some extra expense with additional hardware (video cards, sound cards, video capture, I/O cards and external boxes,...). $1900 won't buy much unless it is 2nd hand, PC or Mac. And then it may be somewhat dated/obsolete.
Admittedly the Mac comes with most of what the average home user would require already built in, but then so do multimedia PCs you can buy at Noel Leemings. There isn't a whole lot of difference in price these days.
Alan
Alan
2005 Disco 2 HSE
1983 Series III Stage 1 V8
Not a 'gamer' at all.
So, you would be happy with a IBM clone?
Price range seems that clones are more powerful?
But, Mac has the 'graphics' reputation.
For that its definitely Mac by a mile. Factor in the software that comes on the Mac and you will find it cheaper. Don't get the base model, get at lest the one up from that as it has a larger drive and more RAM standard and is actually better priced. Inc can also help you here as he sells them. If your son is at school/uni/TAFE you can also get the education discount on the price.
MY15 Discovery 4 SE SDV6
Past: 97 D1 Tdi, 03 D2a Td5, 08 Kimberley Kamper, 08 Defender 110 TDCi, 99 Defender 110 300Tdi[/SIZE]
Umm, that may be more to do with the user than the machine. It have also had something to do with the set up of the machine or the chipset it used. Depending on the games too, from what I have seen quite a few require specific video cards and drivers which probably wouldn't fit into, say, an iMac, but would in a tower.
Basically there is very little that you can't do on an Intel Mac that could otherwise be achieved on a PC. At work most Macs are dual boot (roughly 300 of them), with a Windows XP partition and Mac OS X. The Windows suite of applications on them include everything from Oracle developer apps and CAD/3D modelling apps to Office 2007.
I would hesitate to condemn the whole range of Apple hardware and software because you were unable to make one work to your satisfaction.
Alan
Alan
2005 Disco 2 HSE
1983 Series III Stage 1 V8
Well actually they often use the same video cards these days, so yes.
The main difference in performance is between the size of the bus and the speed of the chipset (plus its architecture) and why if he wants equivalency, the price difference is quite small. The Mac has a finely tuned OS kernel that makes maximum use of the chips architecture whereas the Windows OS is general purpose, required to run on many motherboards and chipsets. To get the PC up to the same level that the Mac starts at usually means chucking money and hardware at it to start with until it is running right. But once it's there one can be very happy with it.
Alan
Alan
2005 Disco 2 HSE
1983 Series III Stage 1 V8
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