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Why Mac?

Apple Online StoreIn the PC industry “what passes for design is a choice of differently-coloured injection-molded plastic cases stuffed full of badly-integrated cruft,” Charles Stross writes for Charlie’s Diary. “There are wires everywhere, bad ergonomics… and to cap it all there’s Windows — a dog’s dinner of an operating system — plus lashings of try-before-you-buy junkware. Sure you can get decently designed PCs, but you’ll end up paying as much as you would for a Mac: and you still have to scrape the crud off them to get a halfway acceptable experience.”

“I use Macs because I appreciate good industrial design when I see it; I work sitting in an Aeron chair in front of a 1970s vintage Swedish desk, and I don’t want to spend sixty hours a week sitting at that desk staring at something that looks like it was thrown together from the spare parts bin. I want an operating system descended from UNIX under the hood, because I have twenty-plus years experience of bossing UNIX systems around (and UNIX, in my opinion, exhibits a degree of basic design consistency in its userland experience that is missing from the Microsoft world). I like the Mac OS X graphical experience because it looks good, (as it should, because before it could be released it had to satisfy a fanatical design perfectionist obsessed with caligraphy). And I am sitting in front of this thing for sixty hours a week,” Stross explains. “I have better things to do with my time than nurse a balky, badly-designed system that shits itself all over my hard disk on a regular basis, or spends half its time running urgent maintenance tasks that stop me getting stuff done.”

Stross writes, “I could write while sitting on a cheap IKEA stool in front of a kitchen table, banging away on a netbook loaded with Windows XP. But after a week, my back and my wrists would hurt and I’d be bleeding from the eyeballs every time I looked at the screen. It’d be like spending sixty hours a week driving a cheap Chevrolet Shitweasel instead of a Mercedes: sure, think of the savings — but the pain will get to you in the end.”

Full article – highly recommended – here.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “Stephen H.” for the heads up.]

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