Some people like Macs for mostly rational reasons, others like them for irrational ones.
Some people hate Macs for mostly rational reasons, others hate them for irrational ones.
Many will be ambivalent.
Get enough people on the Internet and some in each group will be #@$$holes to other people in the other groups.
In my case, a $1700 Macbook Air ends up costing about $70/month over 2 years, which is considerably less than I pay for shoddy phone and Internet service. In return I get a lightweight computer with a fairly fast 256GB flash drive.
70/month, I've not seen in that way.
Good analysis.
People usually only see the upfront price they are paying, sometimes the ROI is good enough to make that payment.
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Some people like Macs for mostly rational reasons, others like them for irrational ones.
Some people hate Macs for mostly rational reasons, others hate them for irrational ones.
Many will be ambivalent.
Get enough people on the Internet and some in each group will be #@$$holes to other people in the other groups.
In my case, a $1700 Macbook Air ends up costing about $70/month over 2 years, which is considerably less than I pay for shoddy phone and Internet service. In return I get a lightweight computer with a fairly fast 256GB flash drive.
I don't like macs because I can't get the mouse acceleration to work like Linux or Windows. It's like moving your cursor through treacle.
That's it.
Cost isn't really an issue, build quality isn't either because I don't abuse my stuff and usually bin it after a couple of years anyway.
Service isn't an issue because I can fix my own shit - software and hardware.
UI isn't an issue because I live on the terminal most of the time.