Yup. IT guys tend to forget that most 'normal' people have no idea about how to do things or why things may not be working, and nor do they want to which is why IT guys get work. So when you're at home and you've got photos and video to turn into a DVD for the family you don't want to be fluffing about with techy stuff to make it happen. You just want to put the photos in and let the computer do its thing.
On the other hand, if you are one of those that do like to tinker, then the Mac is a great playground too. It gives you the best of all aspects of personal computing.
An argument that is brought into play when the position is weak and/or untenable. The dominance of the position it represents suggests superior knowledge and understanding and you are supposed to bow out gracefully. It is intended to shut down the conversation.That's life. Deal with it and move on.
That's your life, not mine. I do not and will not live your life. I will move on when I choose to move on, and not when you tell me to. As I have said, my position on what platform is used is, these days, largely a choice of personal preference and even within corporates there is room for alternative OSs if the IT department can shift out of its myopic view of what constitutes effective support vs cost. Nearly all the IT consulting work I do is with large corporates and government agencies and rarely do I see anything in them other than Windows - that doesn't stop me from using Macs or FreeBSD because I choose to.
In more enlightened organisations I have witnessed, the IT department allows users to 'buy' various levels of support so that if the user chooses to, they can have their own OS (Linux too if they want) and get access to the corporate network and applications. There has been no appreciable increase in cost to the IT department but users are happier and they get to use the programs that are written for their platform. Peer support, which exists despite many IT heads accepting it as a valid form of support, can play an equally vital role if clubs of users can be established. So too with Internet based forums.
So what's all this mean? Life is what you make of it, and it doesn't have to be in a Microsoft world. Move into the world that best fits your view of it, be that proprietary or free, or some range in between. Big iron or PC. Make your choice based on what you want or need, and don't listen to those that say there is only one option.
Modern computing is moving towards giving the user more options, not fewer. That is why Macs allow you to run various OSs on the same hardware. To me that's life and with those choices I can move on with it. IT departments that continue to force users into a narrow band of capability are facing ever greater pressure from users to change their philosophical viewpoint.
Alan
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The Mac retains it's good record.
- a bit like BetaCam versus VHS I suppose.
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