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Puncturing the "PCs Are Cheaper Than Macs" Myth

jcatcw writes "The recently converted Scot Finnie went notebook shopping. At the high end of the notebook spectrum, in order to get comparable power and features, a Dell machine comes in $650 over the Apple, and it was clunkier and weighed more. Sony couldn't beat the Apple either. Midrange and low-end machines, though, turn out to be pretty comparable, with more choices in the PC arena but some good values if you happen to want what Apple has decided you need. So, if you're talking name-brand hardware, it's just no longer the case that PCs are cheaper than Macs."

31 of 823 comments (clear)

  1. No competition on the low end by traindirector · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Scot makes some great points about the high end and even the mid-range, but suggesting that Apple is competitive on the low end is just ludicrous. I'd call the low end $500-$1000. Apple's not even in that market.

    1. Re:No competition on the low end by rvw · · Score: 4, Funny

      Hello?

      Hello, is it me you're looking for?
      I can see it in your eyes
      I can see it in your smile
      You're all I've ever wanted
      My arms are open wide
      Cos you know just what to say
      And you know just what to do
      And I want to tell you so much, I love you

    2. Re:No competition on the low end by sacrilicious · · Score: 5, Insightful
      When I say "Macs cost more than PCs" what I actually mean to say is that "Apple isn't in the low end market". Of course, everyone I say the former to understands that I mean the later, except the Apple advocates.

      I think they (or anyone) could be forgiven for not understanding what you mean. If I can buy 1 pound of sugar for $1 at Safeway, or 100 pounds of sugar for $2 at Costco, and a friend asked me whether Safeway or Costco had cheaper sugar, it'd be negligent+misleading of me to simply answer "Safeway".

      --
      - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
    3. Re:No competition on the low end by HTTP+Error+403+403.9 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Can't say I'm surprised, a Mac user is exactly the kind of person who would bring a sword to a gun fight.
      The Mac guy would still win because the PC guy would be too distracted bragging about how cheap his gun is.
      --
      I'm not a Troll, it's reverse psychology.
    4. Re:No competition on the low end by dcclark · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Almost every time one of my non-tech savvy friends is looking for a laptop, I ask if they've looked at Macs. I then, without fail, hear "Macs are more expensive than PC's", and after a few questions, it always turns out that what they have actually found is, "I was looking for cheap laptops, and Apple doesn't make anything in the $500-$1000 range". But, that's not the end of the story. Most of my non-tech savvy friends interpret Apple's low-end laptops ($1100) as being equivalent to a low-end PC laptop ($600). Thus, they think that Macs really do cost $500 more than equivalent PC laptops. These are not the kind of people who carefully compare specs, hard drive size and RPMs, processor speed (mostly they still think Macs are slower too), graphics sets, the value of bundled software, service and repair reputation, etc. They just look at price on a few manufacturers that they've always dealt with.

      So no, many people do not understand that Apple has no low-end. They actually think that all PC makers have the same low end, and that the only difference is price.

    5. Re:No competition on the low end by MyOtherUIDis3digits · · Score: 5, Funny

      Mod me to hell, but I gotta say it:

      And by the time he gets through all the "You have turned the safety off - Cancel or Allow?", "You have pulled the trigger - Cancel or Allow?" BS he will be bleeding profusely from several puncture and slash wounds.

      That, or it just explodes and blows his frickin hand off.

      --
      Ignore anything I said above, I actually agree with everything you believe - mod accordingly.
    6. Re:No competition on the low end by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Compare what you get in that to the $599 or $799 Dell, HP, etc. I think you'll be very surprised with what Apple is able to provide at that price point, especially when you factor in the tiny form factor the machine has.

      Let's do just that. For $800, from Dell, I can get:

      Dell Dimension E520, C2D 1.8GHz, 2GB RAM, 250GB SATA 7200rpm, 16x DVDRW, Intel GMA X3000, Firewire. Oh, and this little handy thing, too: a 17" LCD that doesn't come with the Apple below:
      Apple Mac Mini, $799 edition. C2D 1.83GHz, 512MB RAM, 80GB SATA drive, 8x DVDRW, Intel GMA 950, Firewire. No display.

      Come on, even you would have to confess it's not much of a comparison. The only winning point to the Mac Mini in this case is "small form factor". It loses on every other.

    7. Re:No competition on the low end by plover · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Yes, but your non-tech savvy friends who are in the market for $500-$1000 laptops are there because they can't tell the difference. They most likely use them for web browsing, word processing, email, spreadsheets, slide shows and the occasional game of solitaire. For people like that, price is the single most important factor. For that kind of user an $1100 machine is $600 of waste if a $500 machine can do the same job, regardless of whether it's a PC or a Mac.

      If you were to explain Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) to them, how they won't have virus and worm problems and porno-popups, and will have fewer updates, and how everything typically just works better together, they might be more inclined to consider a Mac. But really, purchase price is most likely going to remain their most important focus.

      --
      John
    8. Re:No competition on the low end by rcamera · · Score: 4, Funny

      i thought the porno-popups were an added bonus of running windows... you make it sound like an unwanted behavior.

      --
      Wave upon wave of demented avengers March cheerfully out of obscurity into the dream
    9. Re:No competition on the low end by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 4, Funny

      So you're saying that 100 Macs cost only twice as much as a single PC?

      Only if you figure in the support costs.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  2. Blah by stratjakt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All this shows is that Vaios and Inspirons are way, way overpriced.

    Why don't you compare the Mac to something from AOpen, Acer, or even eMachines?

    Hell, even Gateway or HP.

    They're all just as "similary equipped".

    You cant specifically compare overpriced shiny crap to overpriced shiny crap and say you "punctured the myth".

    And you can't compare Best Buy's jacked up retail prices to the Apple store. Hop online and see what it would truly cost you, the geek. I don't know where I can get discount Macs online.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    1. Re:Blah by p0tat03 · · Score: 4, Informative

      You're entitled to your opinion, but take this from someone who's owned a number of PC notebooks, and knows a large number of people who own PC notebooks of all brands. (Dell, Toshiba, Acer, I am currently on a MacBook Pro, and very very happy).

      If you're comparing brands like AOpen, Acer, and Toshiba to Apple, you are seriously delusional about build quality. Toshiba in my experience constantly offers more bang for the buck - my Satellite M30 was insanely fast for its price point. Of course, it also sucked ass, was flimsy, and broke a lot. The keyboard would flex downwards while typing, the trackpad would be sometimes unresponsive and difficult to use... The multimedia keys just plain didn't work... I could go on.

      Acer is not better off either. If your machine doesn't have some major glitch on arrival, thank the Gods, and then proceed to discover little design flaws like whiny fans, crappy bearings in cooling units making strange grinding noises... etc. Things that Acer simply refuses to fix, regardless of how much you yell at the poor heavily-accented guy at the other end of the line (after holding for 2 hours). I will be quite content with my Mac, which if it ever has problems (it's had a few minor gremlins) is a quick phone call, with minimal waiting time, and a support rep that actually speaks English and won't run me through the checklist.

      I've never dealt personally with Sony support, but like IBM, I suspect the quality is FAR above what you would get with brands like Toshiba and Acer. I've never been on hold more than 10 minutes on an Apple support line, and every time I called and described my problem, the support tech immediately got down to the issue, instead of running me around with insipid "is your computer plugged in" checklists. Repairs are similarly painless. When the latch on my MacBook Pro broke, I phoned in, and got a FedEx box in the mail the next day. No arguing, no hassles, I gave them my serial number and they confirmed my warranty, and BAM.

      But yes, build quality is important to those of us who rely on our laptops for a living. I have a level of respect for Sony Vaios and IBM/Lenovo ThinkPads, because I have used them first hand and I know that their quality is excellent. The same goes for Apple. Toshiba, Acer, and older Dells are invariably crap in a plastic shell, though Dell has made some major improvements in recent years (support still sucks though).

  3. Re:Dell != PC by __aaclcg7560 · · Score: 4, Funny

    You can find a biege box?! OMG! Why isn't this on the front page of Slashdot? These days I have to settle for black cases and get rid of all the neon LED enhancement crap so it doesn't glow in the dark.

  4. Re:Notebooks, eh? by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 4, Informative

    You haven't been keeping up. Notebooks are growing at a faster rate than desktop sales, and have already overtaken them in retail:
    http://news.com.com/PC+milestone--notebooks+outsel l+desktops/2100-1047_3-5731417.html

  5. Re:Horrible Comparisons! by Logger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The comparison is not bogus, the author explicitly stated he was comparing Macs to brand name PCs. Home built PCs being cheaper doesn't disprove his assertion. Your same home built PC is cheaper than brand name PCs too.

    He also states that if your needed specs fall outside of what Apple offers, you will get a better deal on a PC. Needing to build it yourself definitely falls outside of Apple's offerings. However, if you need to buy a mid-high end brand name box, then his point is valid. And he clearly states this criteria in the article.

    He does not have to be wrong about Apple vs. Dell, for you to be right about DIY vs. Dell.

  6. Re:Imagine... by dave420 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That'd be a great argument, if Macs came with the same hardware choice as you get with non-Apple PCs. As it is, Apple hardware is limited, they have greater lead-times in rolling out new devices (WUXGA screens and 7200rpm 160GB disks on notebooks are a GREAT example, not to mention the choice of graphics cards, the new Turbo Memory thing from Intel, etc. etc.). They're not even comparable. And as for your trolling about spyware and popups, those are not even a problem for most people. And if they want to play games, then there is really no choice, no matter how great Parallels is, it's still not the same as running the OS on the machine itself. "Boot camp!" I hear you cry, well, then you've got to shell out for Windows on top of the price of the Mac, and hope it delivers drivers suitable to use your hardware.

    - If you're not wanting to spend top-dollar, non-Apple PCs are far cheaper.
    - There *are* fewer applications for Apple computers, which is to be expected as they don't command the market-share of, say, Windows
    - They are *different* to use, and if you're used to Windows, that means you have a learning curve to climb, which implies work just to use the computer
    - See above
    - They do use one-button mice, on the notebooks at least, and the "mighty mouse" is not exactly a two-buttoned mouse if you keep a finger on the right mouse button. Again, something you have to get used to. Or you can buy another mouse, again, more money.
    - Apple computers are just as secure as everything else on the market if used properly. Apple doesn't have a magic bullet against trojan horses, it just isn't that big of a target for hackers. As the market share grows, that will become a problem.

    Ignorance IS bliss, my friend. You've just demonstrated the other side of the coin ;)

  7. Why Apple doesn't have a $500 notebook... by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm sure that Apple could go after the low end market but It's my belief that Apple intentionally avoids doing that for a number of reasons.

    1. Margins at the lowest end of the market are thin if not razor thin. Certainly profit per unit isn't great, so each of these sold would mean a minimal profit, perhaps not even enough over the long term to justify any R&D, marketing and support.

    2. Such a model would surely detract from sales of Apple's mid-range notebooks, as there would be a significant proportion of buyers who opted for the cheapest possible portable MacOS solution that they could lay there hands on. So, a low end model would, to some extent, cost Apple revenue, as it cannibalised sales from other, more profitable Apple notebooks.

    3. Cheaper products sometimes (but not always) require corners to be cut. Apple's image (to the public) is one of quality as well as simplicity, and a low end model would perhaps change that image in a way that wouldn't suit it. Certainly Apple would not want people's first experience of the brand to be a negative one, and a low end notebook computer (from any manufacturer) is certainly the sort of product that is likely to disappoint rather than meet or exceed the average user's expectations.

    The bottom line is that Apple just doesn't need to go chasing that segment of the market when doing so has so many cons and so few pros.

    --

    "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
  8. Mid-range macbook cheaper than a Dell? Ha! by marquinhocb · · Score: 5, Informative

    Alright guys, so to start off, I'm a big Mac fan at heart - I started off on the Mac more than 12 years ago, and was a hardcore mac user (the type that would take an argument with anyone about Macs being better).
    And I still think that Apple computers are some of the highest quality computers you can get, and believe me, if mid-range Macs were cheaper, I'd have one.
    But this is simply a ridiculous claim with nothing to back it. For starters, Dell constantly has sales, whereas Macs are always the same price, no drops, no competitive pricing, nothing. A macbook is a macbook is $1,099 is $1,099. No matter where you go.
    Just going to both the Apple store and the Dell store right now, this is what we have:

    MacBook: $1374 (13.3", 2.0 GHz, 1GB, 160GB HD, generic crappy graphics card, 1 year warranty, standard ports + wireless)
    Dell E1505: $1374 (15", 2.0 GHz, 1GB, 160GB HD, ATI X1400, 2 year warranty, standard ports + wireless)

    And mind you this is not even with a Dell sale, this is just your standard off-the-shelf prices. Not only is the Dell $100 cheaper, it comes with a 2 year warranty instead of 1 year, a graphics card you can actually play games with, and a display that's 2" bigger.

    Sorry to burt your bubble, but PC's/Dell has apple beat on the low-end. High end I'll even give you, but again, if you get Dell/AlienWare on a sale, I bet you the PC would still be cheaper than a Mac (Apple doesn't have sales).

  9. Re:This has been true since before the switch to I by bkr1_2k · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sure, you should purchase based on your needs. The problem with that statement, is that this article isn't about what Apple provides that Dell et al don't, it's about the FUD that Apple computers (comparably equipped) are more expensive than PCs. That's simply not true, at least in the laptop market.

    Yes Dell has a lot of options. Having 30 options with 28 of them being for a market I'm not in is no better than having 3 options with 1 of them being for a market I'm not in. I'd also wager that because Dell has so many options, people simply pick the one that's listed as a "special" more often than not, because they simply don't give a damn what is inside. It's no different for Apple users, for the most part. They just want it to work with the applications they want to run. Giving them an extra 20 choices won't really matter.

    --
    "Growing old is inevitable; growing up is optional."
  10. Not true anymore by Slashdot+Parent · · Score: 5, Informative

    I recently went notebook shopping with my wife for an capable business machine (no games, no video editing, you get the idea). We made a dell configuration for her is a Core 2 Duo, 2GB RAM, etc., for $650.

    Apple does not sell any MacBook at all for under $1100.

    I'm sorry, but macs are still more expensive, and as far as I'm concerned, at all price points. The reason the Dell came out so expensive for the reviewer, is that he insisted that the Dell have the exact same specs as the mac. That forced him into a way higher price point on the Dell than he probably needed.

    Reminder, this for me, not for you, but I could dispense with a lot of those requirements if it meant a much cheaper machine. For instance, I don't need the integrated video camera, several of those ports, and the screen is upgraded way beyond what I need. If I were to build my "dream" notebook, it would cost way less than $2800, like the mac did.

    All that being said, I think Macs are great, and OS X is great. I'd buy a mac if I could afford it.

    --
    They don't grade fathers, but if your daughter's a stripper, you fucked up. --Chris Rock
    1. Re:Not true anymore by jedidiah · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No, he read the article.

      He just realizes that the author clearly glosses over that fact and then continues to bludgeon the reader his personal biases and agenda.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:Not true anymore by Penguin's+Advocate · · Score: 4, Informative

      Between the end of November and the beginning of December 2006, 9 people at my office bought new laptops. Every single one of them bought a macbook pro. All completely independently, all who work at a 100% windows shop, and 8 of them had never used a mac before. Even the CEO, who spends every waking moment with her laptop, has been a dell fan for years, and openly hates Macs, ended up buying a macbook pro. How did this happen? It was pretty simple, each of them went to a bunch of sites (dell, hp, lenovo, sony, etc) and priced out the machine they would want, and then for kicks, each went to apple and priced a macbook with similar specs. In every single case the macbook came out ahead by a considerable amount. Enough to convince people who would never buy a mac to buy one, even if they were just going to install windows on it and use it as a PC. Since then, many more have bought macbooks and macbook pros. Every couple weeks someone else pops up with one. I'm guessing this is why Apple's laptop sales grew nearly 100% in the last year.

      --
      Frag 'em all...
  11. This is because you can no longer comparison shop. by maillemaker · · Score: 4, Insightful

    >These are not the kind of people who carefully compare specs, hard drive size and RPMs, processor speed
    >(mostly they still think Macs are slower too), graphics sets, the value of bundled software, service
    >and repair reputation, etc. They just look at price on a few manufacturers that they've always dealt with.

    This is logical and understandable. Look, I've got a BS in Computer Science, and I long ago lost track of the processor race. I used to be a hardware junkie. I could rattle off the 8086, 80286, 80386, 80386SX (no math coprocessor), 486, and 486SX, in all the MHz flavors. But then, rather than keep with a logical way of identifying processors, the manufacturers switched to trademark-able names. Pentium. Itanium. Opteron. Dual Core. Quad Core. Shit even MHz aren't meaningful much anymore. Shopping for a computer has become an exhaustive research project. Most people aren't up for it.

    You know how I shop for computers nowadays? About every five years I go into Best Buy and look for the most expensive eMachine on the isle. I buy that one. I don't have the time or inclination to ferret out what makes one PC better than the next - I figure the price tag will tell me that.

    But if I'm shopping for a bargain PC (like when I bought one for my Mom who only does email on a dial-up connection), then I go looking for the lowest-priced unit on the shelf, and work up in price until I reach the limit of what I'm willing to spend.

    I bought a new notebook computer for my wife a few weekends ago. I was pleased to discover that inside Vista there is a "performance index" or somesuch where the software grades the performance of the computer on a 1-5 (I think) scale. I went down the isle of computers, running the index on each one, and made my decision that way.

    The bottom line is, it is very difficult to examine and understand the performance characteristics of computer systems when you are in the market to buy one. I think this has been intensionally obfuscated by the manufacturers to make consumers have more of an ear towards marketing than technical details.

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
  12. Re:This is because you can no longer comparison sh by Score+Whore · · Score: 5, Informative

    80386, 80386SX (no math coprocessor),


    First, no 386 systems had math coprocessors. The difference between a 386sx and a 386dx involved the sizes of the data and address buses coming off the chip. An sx processor had a 16-bit database and a 24-bit address bus. A 32-bit request would take two requests. It could only physically connect to 16 MB of RAM.

    Shit even MHz aren't meaningful much anymore.


    Mhz never mattered outside of the same processor from the same company. A 66 Mhz Pentium ran circles around 120 Mhz 486s. SPARCs, MIPS, and Alpha's generally ate the intel and compatibles for lunch at much lower clock rates.
  13. Not competitive at the high end either by Solandri · · Score: 5, Informative
    I went through this at the end of 2006.

    MacBook Pro 15.4"
    Processor Intel Core 2 Duo T7400(2.16GHz)
    Memory 1GB DDR2
    Screen Size 15.4"
    Resolution 1440 x 900
    ATI Mobility Radeon X1600 128 MB
    Hard Drive 120GB 5400 RPM
    Optical Drive DVD±R/RW 6x
    LAN 10/100/1000Mbps
    WLAN 802.11g Wireless LAN
    Bluetooth Bluetooth 2.0+EDR
    Card slot 1 x ExpressCard/34 slot
    USB Two 480-Mbps USB 2.0 ports
    FireWire One FireWire 400 port at up to 400 Mbps
    Video Port 1 x DVI (VGA output using included DVI to VGA adapter)
    Audio Port Combined optical digital input/audio line in (minijack)
    Webcam Built-in iSight Camera
    Dimension 14.1" x 9.6" x 1.0"
    Weight 5.6 lbs.
    Currenly $1965 at Newegg

    Asus A8JS
    Processor Intel Core 2 Duo T7200 2.00G
    Memory 1GB DDR2
    Hard Drive 120GB 5400 RPM
    Optical Drive DVD±R/RW 8x
    NVIDIA GeForce Go 7700 512MB (about 25%-40% faster than the x1600, which is underclocked on the Mac)
    Screen Size 14"
    Resolution 1440 x 900
    LAN 10/100/1000Mbps
    WLAN 802.11a/b/g Wireless LAN
    IRDA Yes
    Card Slot 1 x Express Card
    USB 5
    IEEE 1394 1 (aka firewire)
    Video Port 1 x VGA, 1 x DVI, 1 x S-Video TV-out
    Audio Ports 1 x Headphone-out jack (SPDIF)
    Card Reader MMC, SD, MS, MS PRO
    Webcam 0.35 Mega-Pixel web-cam
    Dimensions 13.19" x 9.65" x 1.37-1.46"
    Weight 5.25 lbs.
    Current $1380 at Newegg

    Yes the screen is smaller but the resolution is the same and the laptop is an inch more compact in width as a result. Otherwise, the only major factors in the Mac's favor were the thinness, better construction, bluetooth (a $50 option I didn't need on the Asus), and an imperceptibly faster CPU. Everything else went in favor of the Asus. The price difference is currently about $600. At the time I was $700 ($1500 vs. $2200) or 46% higher for the Mac for a worse video card, no VGA out, no TV out, fewer USB slots, no memory card slot, and a bigger, heavier computer. There was just no comparison.

    Comparing to Dell's web prices is misleading. Dell frequently gives out coupons that give $500-$1000 or 25%-40% discounts on their systems and laptops. Everyone knows Sony is way overpriced. That said, the high end MacBooks are premium computers and are priced in-line with other premium computers. If you're OK with paying extra for a premium computer, then that's fine. But if you do a little searching, you can find better notebooks for less, they just won't be well-known brands. If Apple doesn't fall egregiously behind (their new Santa Rosa MacBook will use an nVidia 8600 GT, which looks like it'll be a solid graphics card), my next notebook will probably be a MacBook so I can run OS/X.

  14. Confirming your theory.... :) by jmorris42 · · Score: 4, Informative

    > I used to be a hardware junkie. I could rattle off the 8086, 80286, 80386, 80386SX (no math coprocessor),
    > 486, and 486SX, in all the MHz flavors.

    Nope, the 386SX was a 386 instruction set compatible processor with a 286 bus to allow easy reuse of existing motherboard designs. The 486SX was the one with the lobotomized mathco. Not nit picking ya, just using it as an example to confirm your proposition. If even us junkies have trouble telling the buzzwords and stats apart how the hell is joe average going to have a prayer? Answer: he doesn't. He does what you do and grab an emachines from Wallyworld or Best Buy... or more likely becomes one more dude with a Dell.

    But one thing is certain, the trend is down. Unless we have another major round of software bloating the number of people who are happy with a minimal machine is growing. This means the magic place is >$1000 on a laptop and $500 for a desktop. Apple doesn't even try to compete in that space and I suspect Microsoft is going to have trouble with Vista if the bar lowers yet again. See the article on slashdot this week about Asus and their $200 laptop like device coming this summer to a store near you. That is the future, and adding $100 for the Microsoft tax at that price point ain't happening.

    Try this experiment if you really want to see what could happen. Go to newegg.com (or any similar site) and see how much desktop you can get for $200. Any volume manufacturer could buy those same basic parts, apply some massive integration, cheap plastic case, etc and sell em on pallets to Walmart at a wholesale price low enough to allow Wallyworld to sell finished boxes for that same $200. To date that hasn't happened because of the question of what to load. Microsoft is too expensive to make the plan viable and they fear a bad reaction if they stick Linux on, probably[1] rightly. But the power of the market is powerful, so someone will eventually figure a way to tap it.

    So in the end, both Apple and Microsoft are most likely to be defeated by an inability to readjust their pricing model quickly enough. And if Dell, etc. isn't careful they will go with em. Computers are about to become consumer electronics. That means high volume, low margin. Even Dell still gets amrgins most CE corps only dream of.

    [1] Because most people don't even realize anything but Windows exists, especially the Walmart set. Thus when they can't load World of Warcrack, etc. many will try to return it and Walmart takes almost anything back.

    --
    Democrat delenda est
  15. Re:Dell != PC by thegnu · · Score: 4, Funny

    Antec offers nice simple cases and gaudy ones. My current case is rolled steel and aluminum. Simple and clean. Not a beige box, but it doesn't have landing lights either.

    If you insulate the plug for the landing lights from the plug that the power comes from by about a half inch of, well, anything, you can avoid the landing lights. Though I do hate having danglies on my computer. F-ing danglies. I had a Sonata, and it made me so very happy except for those danglies for that stupid double-barrel blue spotlight on the front. I'm much more a fan of their utilitarian series, which in prime utilitarian fashion, has no stupid giant lights.

    And now I have a P180, which while not fulfilling my life completely, comes very close. I defy any Mac user to sincerely argue that you can actually say that a Mac Pro is better looking than a P180. But I suppose half of them clicked the probably Reply button before reading this sentence. I guess the Mac Pro case would probably cost a lot more if you purchased it separately. Oh, man... [offtopic] I just had a great idea. Someone needs to call Apple and tell them that your case broke, and you need a replacement part, lol. I would love to have a Mac Pro case. Despite what I said about the P180
    [/offtopic]

    APPLE SUPPORT: Thank you for calling Apple. How may I assist you today?
    ME: My case broke, and I need a replacement part, lol.
    AS: What?
    ME: I said my case broke, and I need a replacement part, lol.
    AS: ...

    Maybe I can affect this whole thread with fake tags:
    [/offtopic] :-)

    --
    Please stop stalking me, bro.
  16. Re: qiuite true, but I can't blame them either by Bastard+of+Subhumani · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Your not paying 2,799.00 for the hard drive"
    OK, maybe it's a typo.

    "your paying it for the bigger screen"
    Hmm. Seems not.

    "failed your case since that runs just about right to all of the other 17 laptop manufacturers"
    Not an idiomatic expression. Several decidely unidiomatic ones, in fact.

    "you would STILL have a smaller HD to the MPB"
    Smaller than.

    "I ended up paying less than 2000 with the educator discount."
    Please tell me you got that through someone else. Please.

    --
    Only three things are certain; death, taxes, and apocryphal quotations - Ben Franklin.
  17. Re:Yeah... by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    99% of the time, PCs are cheaper than Macs

    Of course they are. I spent a lot of time comparing the two when I recently replaced my music/video workstation. There's just no comparison. It would have cost me very nearly twice as much to go with Apple for the very same hardware, even if Apple had a configuration that fit my needs. And that's before even beginning to buy software. I use an expensive professional PCI audio interface that fits my needs precisely, so the Mac Pro was the only Apple product I could have chosen.

    I would very much have liked to be using Logic Pro on a Mac Pro. It's what I learned on, and I enjoy the Mac interface, but not enough to go the extra price. But I'm running Sonar on a PC that has almost exactly the same specs as the Mac Pro and I came in at more than $1400 below the Apple system. Oh, and I also like using the DXi plugins, so that limited me to Windows. I could have found VST or RTAS equivalents, but I have a large investment in DXi gizmos.

    I got 2 bucks worth of hope in the form of a couple of Lotto tickets sitting in my wallet. If I hit the number, I promise I'll switch to the Mac Pro, Logic Pro setup right away. But I'll keep the PC to run some virtual instruments and connect them via optical SPDIF. It might suprise the serious Mac fans, but I am able to be productive (and creative) on my PC.
    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  18. Re:Dell != PC by spun · · Score: 5, Funny

    Step 1. Choose the case. Step 2: Put your junk in that case
    Step 3: Get her to open the case

    P.S. Do not put your junk in the case through the power supply fan while it's on.
    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  19. Re:To the average person by michrech · · Score: 4, Informative

    your right that the Mac mini is like over a year old with no updates or price changes and is way overpriced... but thats it. Your comments on the Mac Pro show you do not know much about "workstation" level hardware... you even admit it wasn't a dual socket board you used...Which means you didnt even price how much a Xeon system would cost.

    Strike 1

    The mini received it's updates when the announcement of the switch to Intel came out. Now, whether this was a year ago or not, doesn't matter. What matters is that it has, in fact, had an update.

    Sure you can build a highly specific machine that meets your individual needs usually cheaper than buying a pre-made system... but thats about all you proved pricing out your parts at newegg... nothing to do with Apple. The Mac Pro is even cheaper than Dell workstations with similiar configuration.

    Strike 2

    Nice of you to sling your crap around without actually having seen the parts I selected. Seagate HDD (one of the most expensive of the brands), Thermaltake 600w PS with cable management (bet the Apple doesn't have that!), the same Xeon, a nice case (it was a case that even had sound dampening material in it), a nice Microsoft keyboard and optical mouse (not the most expensive, by far, but still nice), a SATA CD-ROM that was *faster* than listed in the Apple specs. I even chose a 7300gt with the same 256mb RAM.

    No.. no.. don't go by what I actually chose. Just pick the part where I said Newegg didn't have the same mainboard, so I chose one as close to what was in the Apple machine as possible, and then decide that everything else I chose was substandard crap (hell, the mainboard was an Asus! Hardly crap... It was also one of the most expensive boards in the catagory (if not the most expensive)).

    Looking back, I did spec the wrong processor when I was pricing my machine (I didn't notice that it specified a "woodcrest" core, so I chose the first 2.66ghz I saw in the "Xeon" list). More about that below...

    As I said, feel free to email me with the parts list request. I'll gladly send it along.

    People get upset about Apple being "overpriced" not because they are, but because they simply do not understand that Apple has no want to compete in all areas of the market. They take Apple machines focused at a different area of the market and try to fit it into their comparisons. Apple really doesn't want everyones business... if you want to custom build a machine with the exact parts you want... you know what... Apple does NOT want your business at all...

    Strike 3, you're out!

    FUD. Period. I speced out a "Mac Pro", but with 'PC parts', and it came in $1500 LESS than the lowest end Apple Mac Pro. Yes, it didn't have a "server class" mainboard, but those are not $1500, my fiend. Not even close. I just got to looking at the Apple web site and saw they are listing a "woodcrest" processor, so I went back to my list and noticed I did not choose a Woodcrest. Ok. I find the *exact* processor. $713 from Newegg. Newegg doesn't carry any socket 771 boards (that I could find in their "advanced list" of category selections. I go to Tyan's web site, find an 8 ddr2 socket havin', 2 cpu socket sportin' board. Search google for it's model number (Tempest i5000PX), and choose the first link (so I could probably have gotten a better deal if I looked). Find the board for $426 at superwarehouse.com. That is $1138.99. That fits in the price difference between what I spec'ed and Apple's price! That doesn't even include me REMOVING the processor and board I chose in the first place. That means I'm *still* $300-ish cheaper than the Mac Pro!

    You Fail It!

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    bork bork bork!