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your frustration thus far mirrors mine whenever i touch a friend's mac. if you are good with a pc you are in for being frustrated with a mac, and likely visa versa. i don't like that you have to do things the 'apple way'. i am not about assimilation and trends.
Quote from: JoshK on 4 Aug 2009, 07:08 pmyour frustration thus far mirrors mine whenever i touch a friend's mac. if you are good with a pc you are in for being frustrated with a mac, and likely visa versa. i don't like that you have to do things the 'apple way'. i am not about assimilation and trends.gee, when we started from scratch on a PC*, didn't that entail learning to do things the "MS way"? *and how many times over the past 2 decades did a "new and improved" MS OS not amount to a restart on the learning curve, and/or the requirement for new hardware? I use both, and certainly prefer my iMac/ Tiger at home. Thank goodness we resisted "upgrading" to Vista on our office network - and we'll probably wait at least 6 months before looking at "7"
Quote from: chrisby on 4 Aug 2009, 09:10 pmQuote from: JoshK on 4 Aug 2009, 07:08 pmyour frustration thus far mirrors mine whenever i touch a friend's mac. if you are good with a pc you are in for being frustrated with a mac, and likely visa versa. i don't like that you have to do things the 'apple way'. i am not about assimilation and trends.gee, when we started from scratch on a PC*, didn't that entail learning to do things the "MS way"? *and how many times over the past 2 decades did a "new and improved" MS OS not amount to a restart on the learning curve, and/or the requirement for new hardware? I use both, and certainly prefer my iMac/ Tiger at home. Thank goodness we resisted "upgrading" to Vista on our office network - and we'll probably wait at least 6 months before looking at "7"while not to start an argument, but i was introduced to computers on an apple iie. then 386, 486, pentium, ibm mainframes, solaris on sun boxes, unix, linux and then back to pc. i find that the rest have more commonality with eachother than mac/apple. mac seems to be the outlier from my perspective. learning the original windows took a little getting used to, but you could also fall back on dos. i just find myself having to really search and search to do something simple like search for available wireless networks with my friends macbook. they didn't know how to do it, so it wasn't that easy userfriendly. i am no pro in linux, only having played with it very briefly but it would have taken me less than a minute to figure it out on most linux guis. solaris, same story. in fact, i might have had an easier time on the older mac os.
Quote from: JoshK on 4 Aug 2009, 10:06 pmQuote from: chrisby on 4 Aug 2009, 09:10 pmQuote from: JoshK on 4 Aug 2009, 07:08 pmyour frustration thus far mirrors mine whenever i touch a friend's mac. if you are good with a pc you are in for being frustrated with a mac, and likely visa versa. i don't like that you have to do things the 'apple way'. i am not about assimilation and trends.gee, when we started from scratch on a PC*, didn't that entail learning to do things the "MS way"? *and how many times over the past 2 decades did a "new and improved" MS OS not amount to a restart on the learning curve, and/or the requirement for new hardware? I use both, and certainly prefer my iMac/ Tiger at home. Thank goodness we resisted "upgrading" to Vista on our office network - and we'll probably wait at least 6 months before looking at "7"while not to start an argument, but i was introduced to computers on an apple iie. then 386, 486, pentium, ibm mainframes, solaris on sun boxes, unix, linux and then back to pc. i find that the rest have more commonality with eachother than mac/apple. mac seems to be the outlier from my perspective. learning the original windows took a little getting used to, but you could also fall back on dos. i just find myself having to really search and search to do something simple like search for available wireless networks with my friends macbook. they didn't know how to do it, so it wasn't that easy userfriendly. i am no pro in linux, only having played with it very briefly but it would have taken me less than a minute to figure it out on most linux guis. solaris, same story. in fact, i might have had an easier time on the older mac os. Isn't it a contradiction to say "I'm not into Mac because I'm not into assimilation and trends", then say "Mac is an outlier"...?
i just find myself having to really search and search to do something simple like search for available wireless networks with my friends macbook.
Quote from: JoshK on 4 Aug 2009, 10:06 pmi just find myself having to really search and search to do something simple like search for available wireless networks with my friends macbook. Click on the circular wireless icon in the menu bar (right hand side). I'm not sure how much more obvious it could be made to be.
Quote from: JoshK on 4 Aug 2009, 10:06 pmi just find myself having to really search and search to do something simple like search for available wireless networks with my friends macbook. Click on the circular wireless icon in the menu bar (right hand side). I'm not sure how much more obvious it could be made to be. I believe this is related to what is called "idiom" - see Donald Norman.
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