Microsoft: Mac buyers pay Apple tax
Apple may offer lower-priced machines on Tuesday, but one top Microsoft official said Monday that Mac buyers will still be paying an "Apple tax."
In a lengthy interview, Brad Brooks, vice president of Windows Consumer Product Marketing, argued that Mac buyers face hidden costs if they try to add Windows to their Mac or if they decide to forgo Windows compatibility.
Brad Brooks, corporate vice president, Windows Consumer Product Marketing
(Credit: Microsoft )"It's really a definition now between choosing something that is limited, and somebody chooses for you, basically the 'i' way, or actually taking it to a much broader scope, which is 'your' way, and defining it through Windows, and the experience that comes with the tens of thousands of partners that build applications, services, and content for the Windows platform every day," Brooks said.
Brooks comments came ahead of what many expect to be Apple's announcement of laptops that move the Mac maker further into the mainstream price range, perhaps with machines as low as $800.
Here is an edited version of the transcript of my interview with Brooks.
Q: Where are things at right now with Vista in the market?
Brooks: No. 1 is that we're seeing consumer perceptions in general swinging in a much more positive direction. We're seeing people have an even better experience after SP1, and we also are starting to see people realize the value that has always been inherent in Windows, that is really starting to play out with the economic conditions that are starting to swirl around us today.
You mention the economic conditions. Obviously, Microsoft is a little bit removed from sort of the end marketing of the products, but what kinds of things should the PC industry do in a time of economic challenge?
Brooks: As we look at the end market going forward, we are getting much more involved in it with our investments in retail, with our investments online, with our investments with PC manufacturers around quality-tested and scenario-enhanced machines. But, we're also looking at the different things that you can get with Windows, and understanding what is really involved with what we call the "Apple tax."
There really is a tax around there for people that are evaluating their choices going into this holiday season and going forward. There's a choice tax that we talked about, which is, hey, you want to buy a machine that's other than black, white, or silver, and if you want to get it in multiple different configurations or price points, you're going to be paying a tax if you go the Apple way.
There's going to be an application tax, which is if you want choice around applications, or if you want the same type of application experience on your Mac versus Windows, you're going to be purchasing a lot of software. And even at that you're not going to get the same experience. You're not going to get things like Microsoft Outlook, you're not going to get the games that you're used to playing. There's a technology tax--Apple still doesn't have HDMI, doesn't have Blu-ray offerings, doesn't have e-SATA external disk drives that work at twice the speed of FireWire. And so you've got all of these things that are truly taxes.
You've also got an upgrade tax. The only machine, as far as I know, within the Apple lineup that's actually upgradeable is the Mac Pro, the $2,800 version, which is (more expensive than) just about any PC configuration that you get from any one of our manufacturers.
It's interesting that you talk about the application tax. Arguably, in some ways, the compatibility story on the Apple side has never been better, given the ready availability of things like Parallels and VMware Fusion. Hasn't that advantage actually declined since Apple switched to Intel?
Brooks: You know, that's the crazy part about it. If people want a Windows experience, then start with a machine that was built for the Windows experience. There's no question, if you look at it, and go to Apple's Web site today, their No. 1 selling feature that they're telling students as to why buy a Mac is because it does run Windows, and that you can get Office when you're running it in Boot Camp or Parallels. But, then you're just paying that tax again. You're paying for an upgrade to Windows, you're paying for the full version of Office, where you could get all of that at one price, at a price point that with a Blu-ray disk drive you can get with an $800 range from an HP or Sony.
If it's a tax, it seems to be a tax that more and more people are willing to pay.
Brooks: You know, I think it's a good point. I think the question is, though, do customers really know what they're getting into? I don't personally believe that customers really know that a copy of Parallels is going to cost them $80, or that when they really look at what they're going to have to pay in terms of another $200 for a (full boxed copy of Windows), that they're going to pay for another $149 for MobileMe to put on there, Internet services, which they can basically get all the same functionality when they have Windows and Windows Live working together.
But I also think that as all of our budgets start shrinking rather dramatically, based on what's going on around us, customers really will start to understand all the things that not only are they giving up in terms of choice, in terms of compatibility, in terms of usability, they're also going to see that they have real out-of-pocket expenses that are significant for their budgets, and for their technology choice.
Some people would argue on the flip side of this, when you buy a Windows PC, you have to get antivirus software, and it's not something that historically a lot of Mac users have seen the need for. Are there some things that line up on the Apple side of this financial equation?
Brooks: That is a fallacy to think that Macs are somehow invulnerable, or impervious to virus, or phishing, or spyware. And we will tell you that based on our own data that you're 60 percent less likely to get any type of virus...if you're running
Windows Vista versus Windows XP SP2. And also is that things like phishing scams are very real to the average consumer. And when you have Windows Vista running with IE7, we know that that capability together is blocking well over 11 million different phishing attacks a week. You've even got, No. 1, service providers like eBay out there on the Internet today that won't even recommend you using the
Safari browser because it is so compromised when it comes to phishing attacks. So there really is a security story here around Windows Vista running in connection with IE7 that really does create safety for our customers.
You mentioned that Vista is 60 percent less likely to be a victim of virus than XP SP2, but how does that compare with viruses on the Mac?
Brooks: You know, it's hard to get a direct comparison, Ina. I want to be very specific in any kind of the data or the information that I give you there is that you're running one system versus another. The best way to really look at it is based on the Internet services, and what's really going on out there in terms of things like phishing or other types of scams that can actually happen through your browser or Internet experience. That really is much more of a direct comparison.
Just the fact that we're having this long of a conversation about Apple, it seems to reflect a shift in Microsoft's thinking that Apple is more of a threat on the PC side. I mean, how do you guys view Apple in terms of a competitive threat on the desktop?
Brooks: The conversations that we're having really started back around our partner conference in early July. And I came out and said, right there onstage in front of tens of thousands of partners, "we're drawing a line in the sand."
There are two things that are going on here. No. 1 is that we're tired of not defining our own products, and the product experience, and the experience that literally billions of users are getting on Windows every day, and well over a hundred million users are getting on Windows Vista every day. And that is a great experience, it's a secure experience, an experience that gives people more choice, it's an experience that's compatible with their whole lives. And that it's our time to tell that story, and that we will tell that story on every level. We will tell of it in terms of what it brings to people in terms of a world without walls, a life without walls. But we'll also tell it in terms of what they give up when they choose to go down a direction that is not with Windows, and all call out all the costs, particularly this Apple tax cost that people are paying upfront, and that has not been defined in the marketplace effectively.
Is it fair to say that Apple as a competitive threat now is at its highest point in the last 10 or 15 years?
Brooks: What we want to define as a consumer experience is not nearly as limited as what Apple makes it out to be. We have a huge choice, a huge diversity, an ecosystem that can bring a range of choices, whether it be on cost, whether it be on technology, whether it be on the types of magical application experiences that you can only get when you use the Windows operating system. And it's really a definition now between choosing something that is limited, and somebody chooses for you--basically the "i" way--or actually taking it to a much broader scope, which is "your" way, and defining it through Windows, and the experience that comes with the tens of thousands of partners that build applications, services, and content for the Windows platform every day.
I guess I'm still a little confused, though. You know, Apple's market share has been growing considerably in the last couple of years, and their customer satisfaction levels are certainly as high as any PC maker in the industry. I mean, is the argument basically that consumers just don't understand what they're getting, and for some reason think they're happy with a Mac?
Brooks: No. The question is, or the argument is, that understanding what the true value is of Windows and the choices that they make every day, really is not about Apple. It's really about what is Windows, and understanding having customers understand the different things that Windows brings in terms of compatibility and choice to their everyday lives. And we have just not done an effective job of helping tell that story up until the last couple of months.
There's no question that Apple will come out and tell different things. As a matter of fact, we fully expect within the next couple of days for them to announce the lower cost entry into the marketplace. But we really believe that it doesn't matter whether they're talking about a $900 or an $850 laptop, it's really still taking shavings off the iceberg to create a snow cone. The much bigger problem that we have or that customers will face is that there's a much bigger cost that's associated with this. And it is not a question of whether they are satisfied or dissatisfied with the experience, it's a question of whether they really know what they're getting into when they choose to embark upon that path. And once they start to continue down that journey, and realize the cost, it becomes a rather significant equation that they may not realize. And part of defining that Windows value proposition, that Windows experience, is making sure that they do.
If you had to list the top couple of things that you think people don't understand about the value of Vista, what would be on that list?
Brooks: No. 1 is that I think, first and foremost, people don't realize the versatility of what a Windows Vista machine can give them around their entertainment and media experiences. We've talked a lot about security over the last couple of months, but what we haven't talked about is the fun that you can get on a machine. No. 1 is, you can watch, record, and view live TV using a Windows Vista machine with Home Premium or better. That you've got a choice of games, a wide range of games, that you just can't get on any other type of platform
But there's also productivity value that you get on Windows Vista that you can't get on a Mac. You can't get Outlook, you can't get Visio, you can't get Project. And when you do get applications such as that, they're usually stripped-down versions that don't have nearly the amount of features, or the usability like the ribbon on Office. Those types of things just don't come with a Mac. And that you don't get the best in terms of hardware experiences, you don't get high-definition playback on Blu-ray DVD on a Mac. You can't do it, can't get it, it's just not there.
Steve Ballmer used a similar characterization in a recent interview as you did just now, talking about Office for the Mac as a stripped-down version. That's not the way it's historically been positioned by Microsoft. Can you kind of explain that, because the Mac BU always talked about it as the full Office. Different, maybe, but compatible. I haven't heard them use the phrase "stripped-down" before.
Brooks: If you define different as meaning lacking several of the features and choices that come in the latest version of Office, yes, it is different. And that's really the definition I'm talking about here--that in the latest version of Office 2007 there's a number of features, usability improvements, enhancements that are universally liked by our users, and really differentiate the product as being the next generation of productivity suites. Those are things that just don't come with the Mac versions.
How direct are you guys going to get with some of these messages in your advertising?
Brooks: Well, you know, I think that we will continue to get further and further into more detail as we move forward with our ad campaign, and how we talk about it. We will continue to get more and more specific on how we define what Windows is. And if part of defining what Windows is is pointing out that there is a significant tax, a compatibility tax, the hardware tax, the technology tax, a choice tax, an overall price tax that comes with committing, or going toward the different computing experience, you bet we're going to point it out.
Is there risk in the way you guys are doing this that some of the messaging sounds like "you, the consumer, just don't get it?"
Brooks: That's far from the message that I want to deliver. What I want to make sure gets defined, and what we want to make sure gets defined here within Windows, is that there is a lot of information that you're just not getting, that you are not being told in terms of having all of the facts put in front of you around the choices that you may not be making, and you may not know what you are giving up when you go in and look at Apple versus Windows, because the information has not been presented to you. And we feel that that's very much missing from the dialogue today. People really don't understand the Apple tax because it's never been explained to them. We have not done it, and certainly Apple is not going to explain their own tax to their customers.
You used the phrase "get the facts" a few times. It sounds like philosophically you're trying to do something similar to the effort that you guys had versus Linux.
Brooks: Different audience, but very much the same approach. I think it was you that quoted me a couple of weeks back saying, you know what, we're not afraid of the truth; we just don't feel like the truth has been told. And this is another case around getting the facts where we don't feel like the truth has necessarily been exposed.
Is there anything new that people can expect for the holidays in terms of Vista PCs?
Brooks: I think what you're going to see from the holiday PCs is going to basically be defined by a couple of different things. I think you'll see more machines around (64-bit) technology. I think you will see Blu-ray DVDs as more of a standard. Certainly you're going to see HDMI out very much a standard, because people really want high-definition experiences for their photos, movies, and TV watching, as PCs become much more of an all-in-one entertainment device.
But I also think that you're going to see a broader range of price points, and we will continue to see Netbook devices where (Apple doesn't play).
On the Vista front, there is a support document up that suggests you guys have started beta testing Vista service pack 2. What can people expect there?
Brooks: You know, it's still really too early to say what or will not be in the next service pack. We get constant telemetry data and feeds coming back in from the people that are using Windows Vista, so we can see on a mass level the things that are causing experience issues or areas that we can improve the experience, and then we look at what the highest priority is and go after it and fix those things.
So, I don't really have anything specific for you at this point of what we will be prioritizing for SP 2, but at the same time, yes, we're continuing to work toward that and there will be an eventual service pack that comes out for Windows Vista.
And you guys have started limited external testing of that?
Brooks: We are continuing to do testing on a number of different levels. As far as I know right now, we have not started limited external testing yet on Windows Vista SP 2.
For complete coverage of the Apple notebook news, see "Apple polishes up its MacBook line."
During her years at CNET News, Ina Fried has changed beats several times, changed genders once, and covered both of the Pirates of Silicon Valley. These days, most of her attention is focused on Microsoft. E-mail Ina. 



Please .. we are much smarter then we were in 1995 and there are more choices now. Microsoft isn't the only game in town.
Have fun Mr. Microsoft.
LOL!
Windows is proprietary? Are you nuts? Mac is just as proprietary as windows. You CAN play non-DRM media on windows. You CAN run Open source software on Windows. You can run hundreds of emulators of older computer systems (Commodore 64/PET, Amiga, TRS-80). You can run Virtual PC (free) to run virtualized systems. And if that's not enough, you can set up your Windows based PC to multi-boot to a plethora of different operating systems (Linux, older versions of windows, DOS, others).
(After browsing some of the Mac user comments)
** Out of the box, a Windows Vista Home Premium machine can burn and author dvd's and create dvd slideshows.
** with an added tv-tuner, the same machine can act as a DVR, AND burn your recorded TV shows to standard DVD for playing on your stand-alone DVD player. And, it will control your digital cable or satellite box. (Wish the cable companies would really get behind Open-Cable standards)
** Windows PC's are also available with tool-less upgrade options for drives and add-on cards
** Not sure exactly why Office for the Mac is less "potent" than office for the PC, usually it's a version behind the PC version, probably because it takes time to transcode.
** Microsoft Tax? Are you out of your minds? With the wealth of open source and free software out there for the Windows operating system?
** Vista a failure? Lack of User rights elevation for administrative access to the operating environment was the biggest complaint back during the early days of Windows XP. Now the fact that it's there is the biggest complaint for Vista. Make up your minds guys.
** Of course Mac's have fewer hardware driver issues than PC's. Apple has a much higher level of control of the hardware available and supported. Windows makes the herculean effort to support as wide a variety of hardware as possible.
** Pushing Blue-Ray a mistake? Well there's more to Blue-Ray than playback, buddy -- That's a 50GB recordable media for Data, video, or music. You can get Blue-Ray BURNERS for the PC, and there are a couple of packages for authoring and editing high definition video for burning them. And if you want to distribute/share home made high-definition video, streaming isn't yet a viable option.
about a company that has just climbed from 2% to 3% in market position. If Apple were to add just 1% every
year, it would take approx 40 years to come to parity with MS (that is assuming if both are still around
at that time!)
So true!
@joetesta70 and @medezark
Your talk is pre-fabricated phrases from Microsoft!!!
There was a time when people only knows MS Windows and we did not know anything else. That times will be difficult to change, unfortunately!!! But will be always people telling that Microsoft is God and is Omnipotent and nothing is better... :-) A life of lies and illusion!!!
Please learn a bit more about what "x86" actually means. Thanks.
Unfortunately, you're wrong. A PC, running windows, can be set up with a boot manager, allowing it to actually boot into another, alternate, operating system. Ubuntu even has the ability to set that up seemlessly, as do some other operating systems. This is somewhat akin to Mac's boot camp, from what I understand. The only thing preventing you from purchasing the Mac OS and installing it on a PC designed for Windows, is Apple's licensing terms.
Check this link.
http://www.boot-land.net/forums/?showtopic=2224
and again this link:
http://www.colinux.org/
No , you can't run another operating system from WITHIN windows without virtualization software (but again check http://www.colinux.org/), but the same can be said for the Mac OS.
BNUX: Pre fabricated lies? Which of my statements is untrue.
bhushan bhaagii: It does show that Microsoft is growing more worried about Apple, in light of the "I'm a Mac" campaign. If I were microsoft I'd see the Apple user's as a chance for additional customers and sales. Go ahead, buy a Mac. If it doesn't satisfy your needs (and for 99% of users, MAC OS WILL satisfy their needs), then buy Windows and set up boot-camp.
Everyone:
I wouldn't be so perturbed by this debate if Apple licensed it's OS for install on non-apple hardware. Comparing Windows to Mac OS. The two operating systems compete in two completely different ecosystems, hardware and software wise. Apple has a sheltered, controlled environment, where they have near complete control of the allowed hardware and software. Windows exists in a more chaotic environment, where they have to contend with a nuch more diverse array of hardware and software.
I like the car dealership comparison, however. Let's call the Operating system the road network. So, Windows would be like the entire roadway system of the world, with every car dealership, and kit cars, and expermiental vehicles but no volkswagons, and you can't drive on the Audobon unless you're in a volkswagon. Apple would be like the Audobon, and you can only drive factory assembled Volkswagons on it. You CAN drive on the rest of the roads, but no one else can unless they're in a volkswagon.
what are you talking about? you can install ubuntu on a windows system and have it become a normal desktop icon on ure system. Just click it and you go to ubuntu.
I agree 100%. My way is something that works out of the box, has few problems, and is super easy to use. Obviously, my way is a Mac!
People in this generation are extremely lazy when it comes to computers.
I like how everyone ignores Linux.
For example; it took me less than an hour to install Ubuntu on my system. Most people absolutely refuse to learn anything about computers; you are a perfect example.
Ubuntu is light-years ahead of what Apple and Microsoft are doing right now. It's faster, more stable, and more customizable, and guess what? No programming knowledge necessary. I hate how people associate Linux with programmers and programming languages. It is absolutely possible to use Linux without going to the terminal once.
After spending billions of dollars writing an OS, what did they get? A slow, bloated, marginally functional OS that required hundreds of dollars in hardware upgrades to run.
MS' perception problems aren't because of Apple/Mac, they're because of the performance of their own flagship product. Making this an Apple/Microsoft battle is an attempt to deflect attention from the real issue: Microsoft's broken development process.
If Apple had released a turd like Vista, they'd have gone bankrupt. Not being a monopoly gives you a certain amount of discipline when it comes to designing and building software. Perhaps Microsoft should concentrate more on its own internal processes than marketing.
The problem is that people like you 'whine and moan' about Vista being 'slow, marginally functional, and bloated' when they have really NEVER USED THE OPERATING SYSTEM IN QUESTION! I took one of my co-workers to TASK for that, getting him fired for maligning Vista when he had never used it.
The only thing Vista is 'bloated' on is drivers, which is where 4.5GB's of that 9GB's Vista takes is coming from, and which Microsoft should just leave on the Vista discs.
But I agree with the other person many who malign it never tried it or tried it and said OMG my 14 year old scanner won't run on it.
And have you noticed how "Inexpensive" PC's are today? I was at Costco on Saturday, a Quad Core 2.4 4gb's of ram, 9800 Video card DVD Burner, and 22 inch Monitor $899 with Vista Home Pro.
Today if you need to upgrade your memory, Mobo ETC it is dirt cheap. I ordered some memory from Tiger Direct last week 4gb of DDR2 memory $39??
If you have a 5-10 year old machine and don't upgrade can you really blame costs?
That said I had an old PC/SERVER kicking around Tyan Dlun Thunder 100 with 8 9gb SCSI drives in it, Adaptec ARO1000AC Raid card 2GB or ram. Was running NT4.0
Decided I wanted to make something out of it. So I decided a firewall would be nice, But SmoothWall refused to install, so I tried Ubuntu nope no go won't support the RAID card, tried a few more distro's nope no go.I know Back in 96 when I build the machine I once had Open BSD running on it, but the new Distro only hang.
I decided to try Vista Bussiness, and darn if it did not load, so I tried Server 2003, and 2008 and they both complained about a driver, but they both accepted the 1998 NT4/2000 driver disk and loaded up fine.
In the end my wife won out making me move it to the basement the sound of those 8 9gb 10k SCSi drives was driving her insane.
But one thing I found amazing, that system would boot up NT4 faster then my Gamer system would finish its bios post.
Apple Lisa
Apple TV
The list goes on. Every company has products that didn't go anywhere or were met with lacklustre response.
Don't obsess so much over things like this. In the end, nobody but you really cares what you think when it comes to OS choices. That's up to the invidual
VIsta is also 60% less used than XP. Maybe that is why.JAJAJAJA
Yes, there are cheaper PCs, but they are cheaper because they offer less equipment and bundled software.
But Microsoft is afraid to tell you that.
The reason why Dell and HP are compared is because they are OEM's. Most folks don't check in with their local geek shops, nor do they build their own from scratch.
And when it comes to laptops, you're almost always stuck with using an OEM.
Looking again today at the Dell Precision T5400 Workstation, bumping it to two quad-core 2.83GHz Xeon's (1333MHz FSB), 2GB RAM ... and not bothering to match any other hardware specs (such as HD size), the Dell's already at $3768 ... nearly $1000 more than the Mac Pro.
That's the Dell Precision T5400. Go check Dell's website yourself.
-hh
"I don't even know"
You are one of the first people in this entire thread to admit that. I wish more people say that they really don't anything about what they are criticizing about. It pu
In the past few days, both the CEO of Microsoft and Brad Brooks, VP of Windows consumer marketing, have insisted that the Mac version of Microsoft office is feature-poor and that it pales in comparison to the Windows version of Office.
After using Office 2008, alongside Office 2007 for Windows, I have to agree. What, exactly are you doing at MSBay? Word makes formatting errors across platforms, PowerPoint has serious compatibility problems between platforms, and hardly any Mac users in Government I know (I'm practically next door to your Bay Area offices...and lots of other angry Office 2008 users work in the same area, down Shoreline at Google) find your product usable at all.
Should I appeal to the CIO at our government installation to get our money back from Microsoft? Despite the claims of compatibility the MacBU has been insisting on in this blog for months, it's close to impossible to use our copies of Office 2008 to collaborate with Office 2007 users. Now we have YOUR executives confirming that the Mac BU turns out inferior software.
What are you going to do? When are you going to face your angry customers?
(Seriously, I think this idiot just opened up Microsoft to a Class suit regarding Office 2008.)
Maybe Brad would LIKE to think that's true, or maybe on Microsoft's behalf he just wants YOU to think that's true.
Either way, I'm here to tell you that the eSATA drive connected to my MacBook Pro is a thing of beauty and a joy forever, and works beautifully with Apple's automatic Time Machine backup software.
Another fun thing I've done is connect my computer to a 40-inch LCD TV, using a five dollar DVI-to-HDMI converter. So in spite of what Brad Brooks said above, I guess my Mac must have that too!
Based on these two little "divergences" between what Microsoft's Mr Brooks has to say about my Mac, and what I actually am experiencing when using it, I feel pretty safe disregarding his other blather about how Microsoft has an idea of the user experience that is not as narrow as how Apple wants to define it. In fact, to me, it seems a lot more "taxing" to set my sails at least according to this particluar Microsoft windbag.
And tell me where on http:// www.apple.com/ macbookpro/ specs.html is there an eSATA listing? Sorry but you probably are connecting the firewire port of your external drive. Firewire is slower compared to eSATA, so while your external drive may have both, simply using the firewire port makes it so your drive is running slower. So PCs have an advantage there.
If you want true HDMI, you need to keep that signal pure all the way through. If you want to compromise with ad
Okay, but now go try to find it for sale on Microsoft's website...
Gosh, where is it?
(Or for that matter, where are the computers?)
The bottom line is that neither Apple nor Microsoft sell it as OEMs...all support comes from the 3rd Party market (which remember, for Microsoft means HP, Dell, etc).
Thus, the bottom line here is that this claim was disingenous...and really designed to be FUD.
If you want eSATA on a MacBook Pro notebook, all you need is an eSATA ExpressCard/34 interface card. It looks like Griffen, LaCie and IOGear all offer one. If you have a Mac Pro, Sonet makes a PCI card, as does also LaCie.
The same basic principle also applies for addkng Blu-Ray.
And none of this has anything to do with technical debates of the merits of eSATA versus SATA-II versus Firewire800 / FW1600 / FW3200. There's good and bad to any of these choices...the good news is that the consumer does have choice, even if it isn't being always offered by the System OEM.
-hh
Sorry but where else do I buy a Mac but from an Apple reseller? I can buy a PC with eSATA built-in from many sources. *THAT* is what is relevant. Your "principal" for blu-ray is also equally flawed.
"-hh:
Sorry but where else do I buy a Mac but from an Apple reseller?"
If you mean places other than Apple's website, or an Apple brick & mortar store, then:
Amazon.com
"Best Buy" stores
In New York City, there's been tekserve.com for the past 20 years. They're a brick-&-mortar as well as a mail order.
"I can buy a PC with eSATA built-in from many sources. *THAT* is what is relevant."
Are you confusing convenience with capability?
Not to be condescending, but how supremely difficult to place 2 online orders instead of one, and to then plug an eSATA adaptor into an ExpressCard/34 slot?
FWIW, from a professional engineering perspective, I really don't care for SATA-II / eSATA as an external interface standard...its plug design is weak and since it lacks any power signal, it always requires a second cable for power.
About the only place where it IMO has enough utility to tolerate its disadvantages is if you're running an external RAID stack, but due to current HD hardware performance, the only time that you will actually benefit from eSATA's higher I/O bandwidth (vs current Firewire800) is if you're running a RAID 0 for performance (vs RAID 1 and/or 5), but the fallacy here is that RAID 0's belong "inside the box", not outside, for highest performance. If you want to misuse a technology for what its not best suited for, its your business...but please refrain from suggesting that everyone else has to use it to - - it is disingenuous to claim that eSATA is a technically critical feature on any PC.
-hh
Mind you, I find it entertaining that he is touting the Ribbon interface in Office while I have yet to meet an experienced Office user who likes it.
Massive, endemic bugs. Had to switch to OpenOffice to get a dependable version of Word.
This guy is living in a fantasy world. Consumers aren't asking "what's the cheapest computer" anymore. They're asking for value, and Apple does deliver that in spades, along with a small cost premium.
When's the last time your Aunt Millie "upgraded" her computer? Microsoft's FUD-er in chief here suggests that you can't upgrade a Mac - which is what I thought the move toward USB and Firewire peripherals were about - people's unwillingness to crack the case of most any computer from any manufacturer.
Meanwhile, Apple continues to make it easier for people to upgrade hard drives and RAM with sleds and easy-access doors. This guy is full of it.
I can't say that upgrading PowerBooks/MacBooks has ever proven to be a problem.
My thoughts exactly. Also loved how this guy is trying to say that Office 2008, a Microsoft product, is crap. While I agree Entourage is no Outlook, and it does not currently support VB scripting, Word, Excel and PowerPoint for Mac just have different interfaces for creating the same type of file.
Apple's methodologies may not be the 'right ways', or the 'only ways' to develop and market s/h/ware, but they are certainly 'proven ways' if based only on users' perceptions with regard to ease of use and cost for value.
I've said it before and I'll say it again: "Yes, I'm an unapologetic 'Apple guy'."
There's a reason people feel so strongly about the Apple brand and why Microsoft's shares are dwindling...
Brooks: "We've talked a lot about security..."
After spending a bag of money to upgrade from XP to Vista, there's a 60% reduction in malware, yet if one instead pays the so-called "Apple Tax", you get a 100% reduction instead. Nice of Mr. Brooks to _hide_ that fact.
Brooks: "But there's also productivity value...can't get Outlook, you can't get Visio, you can't get Project..And when you do get applications such as that, they're usually stripped-down versions ..."
And (has already been said) precisely who is reponsible for developing MS-Outlook? MS-Visio? For MS-Project? How is this not a confession of Microsoft failing to provide 'choice' to Consumers? Again, Mr. Brooks hides from taking responsibility, or acknowledging the Microsoft monopoly.
Brooks: "If people want a Windows experience..."
Thanks, but I don't _want_ the Windows experience. I've had ~20 years of tolerating MS-Junk, so its not like I'm an ignorant consumer who simply needs to be "re-educated" (shades of A Clockwork Orange).
And while Mr. Brooks FUD'ing about supposedly hidden "taxes", he doesn't provide one ounce of Value-Added to consumers by quantifying any of his claims, which is ironic, ---> since it is precisely this utter lack of substance from Microsoft which underlies why I no longer value the "Windows experience" <---
-hh
One thing that Brad did not mention was the direct correlation between Mac growth with poor Vista experience. To begin with, the "real" minimum spec of Vista should have been 2GB of memory and stripping down many unnecessary features of Vista that are getting life out of the system.
Brad's analogy of "i" and "your" was totally to the point. With Apple, it's like going to Costco where you have only one choice, and rather a good choice (not great). With Windows, it's like going to Safeway, where you have access to a panoply of features and products, hence the "your" factor.
Having said that, Microsoft failed after 2006 and they have to fix it asap otherwise "cute design" will win over "functional product".
my 2 rials...
PS: but I am sure CNet readers are mainly Maccies... and disagree with me big-time :-)
PCs are not the problem.. microsoft is. I can't believe people are satisfied with using an OS that is something like 8 years old..
I have worked extensively with Windows, Linux, Solaris, Novell, and Mac. For a personal computer, the Mac experience is hard to beat. I truly enjoy time spent on my Mac. I simply use and endure Windows at work, but there is not much to enjoy. On the other hand, trying to use a Mac as a server platform... well, not so much. Windows wins hands down on the server side.
The best thing MS could do would be to fire that idiot Ballmer, stop trying to buy search engines, and fix their bloody' OS. Windows is the face of MS, and it needs to get good. And soon.
MS should concede the glossy GUI to Apple, and make Windows lean, mean, fast, and *stable.* They need to can the registry and bring Windows kicking and screaming into the 21st Century.
Windows is not as secure, stable, and pleasant to use as OSX. It hasn't been for a while, and it really needs to be.
Well, you don't get all the eye candy because the GPU in the PowerBook is not Core Graphics compatible. It doesn't make a major difference in the applications that my wife uses so the only one I can cite is that the ripple effect of widgets being added in Dashboard doesn't happen. Minor impact but one worth mentioning just to ensure that we "keep it real".
Actually it reflects more to it's positives then negatives. It is still used and in demand today, 8 years later. It actually is a very good and stable OS, people see no compelling reason to change. Also since it is 8 years old it runs 'lean and mean' on today's hardware. It is one of MS's best effort ever, and even though they are pushing Vista, it will be their flagship product for quite some time and gave Mac OS very good competition, which would have continued if MS didn't release Vista.
<<<Windows is *still* clinging to DOS>>>
That was Win Me and earlier versions such as Win 98, XP is based on Win NT which is not DOS based, though it still supports DOS.
Windows? Well, you got Windows and Linux. That's two out of the three. Otherwise, you've got to monkey around with a PC that meets strict requirements to run a hackintosh.
Apple hardware - the best way to run the most popular operating systems around today!
Have you ever tried running MS Update without have IE fire up? How about Genuine Advantage interference? How about constantly having to prove you're the rightful owner of your own software?
Mr. Brook's comments have very little to do with the truth then typical MS smoke. Ask yourself this basic question: "Why is the biggest company in the business so worried about such an 'insignificant' player?"
How about install basically any app, there are ridiculously few written for just OSX.
Mac is over priced junk, and you are all just trying to validate your wasting money on it.
No, because you only sell them for Windows. Doh! And you're selling stripped down versions of Office to Mac users. So, in essence, you are still protecting your desktop monopoly by either not selling a product or crippling it to the extent that no one will want to buy it.
But what if you don't need Outlook because you have other FREE calendar and mail options. Why pay almost $500 for Visio to draw circles and squares, when you get Omnigraffle for a fraction of the cost (and it looks a heckuva lot better). And Project is, like a lot of MS software, just overpriced and bloated?with plenty of alternatives in the marketplace.
Interesting how the 'consumer' discussion jumped into 'enterprise' users quickly.
His main presumption is that for those who want to switch to Macs, they must have exact parity with Windows in terms of Office, Outlook, Visio, Project, etc.
But Windows has no real answer out of the box for iTunes (iPod), iMovie, iDVD, Garageband, iWeb?so to reach parity there, you must pay a WINDOWS TAX.
The only REAL Apple tax to pay is to MS. You can run Windows on the Mac after you buy a license. (And play all of your favorite games like a lot of my switcher friends do?for their primary computing experience they boot back to OS X so they don't have to deal with all the Windows issues.)
It really is Microsoft's same old tired "quantity vs. quality" argument when they get to talking about available applications.
Just because you keep saying it over and over, doesn't make it the truth, Brad. Or Steve. Or Bill. Or Jerry.
Just how dumb do you think we all are, Mr. Brooks?
But really I have a friend at work he has a Macbook pro every time I walk by his Cubicle its booted into XP? He says he uses the MAC functionality at home. Okay that's a possible reason. But it seams many of these so called issues are issues from the old days.
Apple really pushed the QUALITY vs Cost vs Quantity issue before, that time Microsoft has to make an investment in them to keep them from going belly up. Someone from Cnet posted a month or so ago a chart showing apple sales and profits. One thing that was interesting is that the huge money maker has been the iPod, the MAC sales are there but are no where near the huge uptake one would think followed on the iPod success heals.
Is the MAC good? Sure it is, do I like paying 8 times the price for memory from the Apple Store or double the price for the same memory at tiger direct same memory one says for apple the other for PC the apple one is double the price?
There's one other thing that caught my attention, MobileMe; Brooks said that you have to pay a fee to use the service (and I know, I'm a suscriber), a fee you wouldn't pay using Windows and Windows Live, but I'd rather pay the double of what I'm paying now than having ads all over interface. Besides, I love the way MobileMe automatically syncs with my iPhone, my Macs and my PCs.
I don't care for Outlook since I'm a student, I don't need enterprise related stuff right now, and as far as I can remember all the interviews done with Microsoft employees, tend to end up the same, they're just stupid and argue how Mac OS can't do something that software designed for Windows does.
Again, I'm not paying the "Apple TAX" since I have no need, or desire to use Windows on my Apple computers.
(Except for Windows Media Center, which are dedicated PCs, that, by the way, give me trouble every Windows Update, LOL)
We are slowly moving away from Microsoft and purchasing iMacs. The user community has been completely happy with the stability OSX gives them compared to Windows. In many cases, the "Apple tax" is minimal and very misleading since we transfer the XP license from the retired machine to the iMac so our only true "tax" is the $80 for the purchase of VMware Fusion unless we decide to use Bootcamp, which we don't. And we transfer the licenses of MS Office too. So what "Tax" are they referring to for users that are replacing their machines?
Sounds like Microsoft preys on the FUD factor that users don't know any better or are not intelligent enough to know that in the long-run, they'll be happier getting away from Windows.
The fact is that Windows computers are JUST as good as Macs, and better than them at numerous common things that people do today.
What software was "pre-installed" on the vista machine? All the garbage software that HP and Dell stuff their computers to the gills with? Look, Vista itself aside, you really can't argue that OSX has better software for music, movies, photos and the like. And as for faster by far... faster doing what? My Macbook Pro Boots up in under 15 seconds, shuts down in under 5, takes under 2 seconds to open up safari...
What "common" things do they do better? Games, sure. Business, sure. Some highly specialized software, sure. But for email, web, photos, music, movies, ect.... your crazy.
These types of tactics really turn me off since they are taking my intelligence and ability to evaluate the products that I choose to use for granted
As a windows expert user, i have to say Macs are beautiful and well made. I bought myself a macbook in May and I loved it. I've had many windows-based laptops before and I hate it when the more i use, the slower it gets. What about Vista? Well, compatibility. I think this is the best time for Apple to gain market share because i myself prefer XP over Vista and if everything can run on Leopard, I'll definitely go for Leopard. One thing that's missing on a mac is a graphics library. Microsoft offers DirectX and it became way more superior than OpenGL.
No, YOUR ignorance is bliss on the defrag subject:
http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1375
Do a Google search using: "Apple defrag OSX" and see for yourself. OS9 we had to defrag, BUT The average new Mac user running OSX does not have to defrag unless they are working on lots of large video files or fighting for every last GB of space does not have to defrag. Macs are not PC's you can't compare your experience on a PC to what we know about using Macs for years.
I defraged a few using Disk Warrior and it didn't matter a bit. I found that when they are slow, check your RAM. Less than 2GB these days, and maybe you need to bump to 4 if you can. Check how much RAM your computer is using on an average work day via your "Activity Monitor" found in Utilities folder, click on System Memory tab. Check it AFTER you've worked for most of your normal day. You should see lots of green on the wheel after you've worked a normal day. A sliver of green means you ran out of RAM space. If it runs out of RAM it will start swapping stuff to the HD, if the HD has less than 10% free, you may start to experience problems. It needs thinking space, RAM is like short term memory.
Also you can have Caches that go corrupt. If things seem "weird" or fonts are acting up, reboot holding down the Shift key, this boots it in "Safe Mode" (you'll see that in red at the top of the log in window" then when the window comes up reboot normally again. This Safe Boot deletes all your caches (gets rid of any corrupt ones) and performs a few other fixes. It's the safest quick fix you can do, it does no harm even if it doesn't fix the problem.
- by Alphaman63 October 13, 2008 3:26 PM PDT
- I just recently returned to the Apple fold after way over a decade; I bought a Mac after years of debating, and the experience was eye-opening. I'm not a 100% switcher, as I still run Windows, OpenVMS, and Linux at my house, but I now spend most of my time on my Mac.
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- by ckurowic October 13, 2008 5:48 PM PDT
- I think I might have to print our your comment and frame it. Well said.
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- by bgnm October 13, 2008 7:30 PM PDT
- Excellent observations. I'm about a 98th percentile Windows user, but my personal stuff is all Mac. I've had numerous Windows experiences (mostly OS upgrades) in which on a single day, I've had more problems that in 20 years of Mac ownership. I keep coming back to the real reason that the Microsoft apologists are so vocal--job security.
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- by Vegaman_Dan October 14, 2008 9:16 AM PDT
- I like your analogy. But it must be updated that with a Mercedes, you are largely paying for an image, not performance. Mercedes has long lost that honor and is now burdened with the 'grandparents' image. Not really as hip as Apple would like to be. Also, Mercedes is exceedingly expensive for what you get. When it does fail (and don't fool yourself- all hardware fails), you have to go to the only shop in the city that can service it and you pay through the nose for that honor.
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- by purcell429 October 15, 2008 5:37 PM PDT
- Nicely Done. Best comment here.
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- by Seaspray0 October 16, 2008 3:48 PM PDT
- But only a few people buy mercedes because they are very expensive. Whereas, you can buy another car that will still get you from point A to point B for alot less, and yes, they sell. I seem more mitsubishi's on the road than mercedes. This is the same in the computer industry and why apple NEEDS to release a more affordable computer. Mercedes is a niche car manufacturer and the same comparison can be made for apple because they are not selling computers in all the mainstream price ranges. I can't understand why so many macfans are obsessed with apple NOT releasing an $800 laptop. Is it a "snob" thing?
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Showing 1 of 8 pages (248 Comments)I liken it to automobiles. Windows is like being able to buy your car at AutoZone. Go ahead and buy the chassis you want from whatever vendor pleases you, but then all the add-ons come from various manufacturers -- pick out the size engine, the transmission, what ratio rear diff you want, and would you like 4 wheel disc brakes with that? Two doors or four? Convertible or sunroof? Macphersons or coilovers? NA, turbo, or supercharger? And when you're all done, you have to reboot every few miles to keep it running.
The Mac platform is more like going to a Mercedes dealership, picking out the car you like, then driving it for 20 years with lifetime roadside assistance and performance out the... uh, tailpipe. Everything doesn't just work, it works well. Fit and finish are glorious. Comfort is luxurious. And if you do need help, you get kid-glove treatment. And when the whiny kid in his home-brew rice rocket pulls up next to you, revving the stew out his tin can exhaust, you can just roll up the windows to block out the sound, put your foot into the supercharger, and leave him wondering if he needs to reboot again.
Do you pay more for that satisfaction and security? Sure. But you then get what you pay for. And in the case of Windows, you pay for what you get.
Sorry, Mr. Brooks, your "Apple Tax" analogy doesn't stand up to scrutiny, and it doesn't compare to the cost of the Microsoft Tax.
No thanks, I'll stick to Autozone, Kragen, NAPA, PepBoys, etc. I like to work on my own equipment. It's mine, not theirs.