Why Buy A Mac?
Over the past couple of weeks, several people have asked me why they should buy a Mac when Macs seem more expensive than some advertised Windows PCs. Well, here are my top five reasons why Macs easily justify their price:
1. Quality. Apple desktop and laptop computers are rated #1 by Consumer Reports for repair history, tech support, and consumer satisfaction. Apple leads all other reviewed computer manufactures, including Sony, Dell, and HP in all those categories. Any computer can have tech problems, but statistically Macs are much less likely to have them happen.
2. There are still no viruses for OS 10.4 in the wild, and there never have been. Of course, this could change, but Apple has proven it has built an extremely secure OS. Apple is committed to keeping the OS secure and up-to-date as well.
3. You can run multiple OS’s on any Intel-based Mac. Mac OS X, Windows XP, Windows Vista, Windows 2000, Linux, Unix etc. If you buy one Mac and install Windows, it’s like owning two or more computers. Indeed, Unix and X11 are already installed on all current Apple computers. So far, no Windows PCs can effectively run Mac OS X. For many people, especially web designers and scientists, this is a must-have feature.
4. Awesome multi-media architecture. Macs are ready to make high quality media projects out of the box with iLife and the extremely multimedia-friendly OS X. Macs are ready to run ultra high-end, cutting edge multimedia apps as well, such as Shake, Avid, etc.
5. High resale value. It’s a pain if you want to buy a used Mac, but great if you are selling one. Macs retain the highest resale of any computer in the industry. This makes it somewhat easier to upgrade to a new Mac in the future. Macs retain high resale value because they tend to be extremely reliable.
Of course, I am very biased. But I love using my MacBook Pro for writing, designing, communicating, and yes, even for dreaming. OS X, even with it’s limitations, is really the best operating system on the planet. I also love the features, power and design of Macintosh computers, especially now that we have the power and flexibility of the Intel processors.
I do wish every Mac came with more USB ports, though…
I’ve been using Pages for over a year now as my main writing and page layout application (I hate the term “word processor”; reminds me of clunky things like Word and that’s what Pages definitely isn’t), both at home and in my job. And I’ve used Keynote as my only presentation software as well. So has my college age daughter. No issues whatsoever, in fact it’s been a real joy! Import from and export to Office format works flawlessly, apart from the documented features which don’t exist in Pages such as change bars, and provided that your Office documents aren’t already mangled (which is easy to do and not always obvious…). I carefully tested a large number of Word documents last summer and was happy with the results.
The only reason not to switch would be if you rely on Office features which iWork doesn’t provide. Change bars and integration with Endnote bibliography software in Word, and pivoting tables and a number of relatively obscure formulae in Excel would be examples.