Originally posted by ConcreteSchlyrd
There are "easy" things which Windows should be able to do but can't: Hibernating with a 2nd monitor connected and unhiberating somewhere else with no monitor connected works about half the time. Switching from a wireless to a wired connection either doesn't work or takes minutes. (You can't blame those things on me )
We use Microsoft Messenger (RVP protocol) with dedicated Exchange servers at work but Messenger doesn't scale to our size- daily logouts, overwhelmed servers, and reporting online users as offline were constant problems (and sometimes still are). We have a 1.5 year old trouble ticket that's still open with Microsoft. Could an IM program on Windows using MS servers really be that hard to write/configure correctly? It's passing text messages for cryin out loud.
Yes, I realize that there are disadvantages to Mac OS X and buying Apple. I had a co-worker who wouldn't talk about Apple because he doesn't believe in 3% market share. And I can give you as much anecdotal evidence as you want but in the end it's apples/oranges, Beta/VHS, what's practical/what's pretty, etc.
Maybe I'm annoyed because things don't work at my company the way I'd like them to and (from my perspective as a user) Microsoft seems to be part of the problem. Maybe I'm just upset that I haven't found a good way to seamlessly use my PowerBook at work and get rid of my Dell. I like not constantly doing virus scans, being able to switch back and forth between wireless and wired ethernet, hibernating/unhibernating instantly, etc., etc.
I'm very interested to see what happens after Apple moves to Intel- if they decide to support more hardware configurations and if they gain significant market share. Will Mac OS still "just work" if Apple starts supporting more and more hardware and other companies start supporting OS X and writing (possibly buggy) drivers? Will viruses ever be a problem for Linux/unix/Mac OS?
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