My MacXperience
I have used Macs consistently for about 5 years, and exclusively for about 3. I say exclusive with some reservations - any time I've spent on a Windows machine in the last few years has been spent either at work (where I have no choice) or in order to play games (which are sadly underrepresented in the Mac universe). I do everything else on my iMac or my iBook before it.
Here are the reasons:
1) The macintosh operating system was created by artists. Windows was created by engineers. This results in a simpler, more intuitive workspace.
2) There was a time in my life when tinkering with the internal organs of a computer made me happy. Then, I started to care more about actually getting things done. It's a cleche, but Apples just work. For example, in order to uninstall a program from my Mac, I drag its icon from the Applications folder and drop it into the trash. I don't have the time or the inclination to watch my computer chunk and chunder through dialogue boxes and progress bars just to uninstall the shareware program whose demo time has expired.
3) It runs Windows really well. I can still play my games.
4) It has a little camera and a little microphone built-in.
5) There are some damn fine programs available for the Mac, giving functionality and integration to your system that I just haven't found in Windows. Here are my top six:
- Quicksilver. To quote the developer's description, this program is "a unified, extensible interface for working with applications, contacts, music, and other data." This does not even begin to describe the miraculous functionality you can get from it. It basically allows me to control every aspect of my computer just by typing keystrokes. To send an email to somebody, I press the hotkey, type the person's last name (or part of it, as it has a very intelligent auto-complete) and it gives me a little icon for that person's contact information in my Address Book, hit tab, type the letters "co" (for "compose), and hit enter. Up pops a blank email with that person's email as the primary receiver. By using similarly simple and obvious key combinations, I can add more recipients, write a subject, attach one or many files and even write the whole email just within Quicksilver and I never have to take my hands off the keyboard.
Also, I can search any website that has a search function without actually going to that website. And I can access my Firefox and Safari bookmarks even if those programs aren't currently open. It's really, really powerful.
I can say much, much more about Quicksilver, but you should just watch some videos.
- Textexpander. I blog a lot, and blogs usually have links in them. Instead of typing the acrobatic keystrokes necessary to make this frequently-used html code, I simply type "llink" into any text box anywhere on my Mac, and it takes the link I copied to the clipboard, lays out the code, and puts the cursor between the "a" tags, right where I need it. It can do this with any block of text you type. You assign any flag text you like, and anytime you type that text, it replaces it with the text you have previously written for that trigger.
Or, instead of trying to imagine what my hamfisted description describes, you can watch a video of it at work.
- Transmission + TVShows. This power combo still blows my mind. Transmission is just a simple, bare-bones, pretty-looking bittorrent client. I tell TVShows what shows I want to watch. As soon as those shows are available on various Bittorrent directories, it grabs the link and sticks it into Transmission, which immediately begins downloading them. If I'm not home to watch Heroes, for example, it'll be downloaded and ready to watch by the time I get home - usually within a half an hour of it airing. It's like Tivo without the Tivo.
- iLife. All new Macs come with this power suite of creative programs. It includes iPhoto, which organizes your pictures just like iTunes does, with powerful functionality and built-in editing capabilities. I use iMovie to edit the movies I make. Though I have no talent for it, I occasionally dabble in the little- but-powerful music/sound studio called Garage Band. And for making simple websites with lots of neat functionality, I use iWeb.
On a related note, the stuff built into OS X itself is pretty rad. No need to download a separate program - it has pdf capabilities all by itself, and anything you can print you can instead save as a pdf. Also, hold down a few keystrokes, and you can take a screenshot of all or a selected part of the screen. And changing the big, pretty icons (or small, pretty icons, if you prefer) is really easy, using copy/paste functions. And with some small, rare exceptions, you can drag an item from any application and stick it in any other application. If I want to add a photo to a website I'm working on, I grab it from iPhoto and drop it right onto the page.
Also, Macs now come with Front Row, which is a media center that I can control with the little remote control that came with my Mac. Lying in bed, or sitting within visual range of my computer, I can display every piece of media on it, from the photos to the music to the movies. Example: A couple of friends and I looked through the pictures I took at a recent outing as I controlled the display of all of those photographs on my beautiful 20" widescreen from the comfort of my bed.
- Teleport. I just discovered this one. It lets me put my iBook right next to my iMac and control it with my desktop computer's keyboard and mouse. All I do is drag the mouse pointer across a predetermined edge of screen (which I assign), and I'm instantly controlling the iBook. It's like having two displays, except one of the displays is a fully-functioning computer. Installing it is really easy, too - all you do is install it on both of the computers you want to control, click a couple of boxes in the preference pane, and it just works.
- Adium. It's simply the best chat client ever, and it's only available for the Mac. It seamlessly combines all of the major chat protocols into one unified interface - I use it for MSN, Yahoo, Gtalk and AIM. It's also completely customizable. Oh, and it's totally free, too.
It's also worth noting the programs I don't have to run, like memory-hogging antivirus suites and the aforementioned Acrobat Reader.
Every program listed above is free, except TextExpander (which I will happily purchase when the demo ends).
I don't know if this surprisingly long lecture is going to convince you to ditch your Windows machine for a Mac, but I hope it will. Macs are slightly more expensive (and the gap is shrinking), but they're worth it.
Comments
Super Post!