phyz
Muse
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2004
- Messages
- 965
The world is large and we all have our own idea of what "value" means.it appears to be better value.
The world is large and we all have our own idea of what "value" means.it appears to be better value.
I think the problem is for any comparison is what it's used for. I game, a lot, so I require something hefty in the GPU department and as much good RAM as I can cram in there, that makes an expensive computer. Skeptic appears to be your typical "web surfing, email and word processor" type who would be happy with a £400 Dell (apologies if that's a misrepresentation Skeptic). Joe public, in my eyes, just seem to throw as much money as they can to get the biggest numbers that they don't understand so they can boast to their equally bemused mates at the pub.No idea I just selected a machine that cost less than the mac and then put in as much stuff that would out perform the mac while staying below the MAC in price. It isn't something I would buy (I'd go for a weaker graphics card but stronger motherboard and CPU).
Give it time.
The world is large and we all have our own idea of what "value" means.
I'm a computer science PhD student, and I feel the same way. My PC is about the same age as yours. Trying to keep up with the tech curve is boring and expensive.Am I the only one who sees a computer as simply a machine to do certain things with, and care not at all about what software, exactly, is used to do it? I am using a five- or six-year-old machine.
While I will have to upgrade eventually, I suppose, I find it absurd that people find it necessary to buy a new computer strong enough to run the new operating system... which in effect, simply allows you to do all the stuff you could do with the OLD machine, anyway. What's the point?
Then again, I still listen to LPs and have a 20-year-old television, so perhaps I'm not representative.
Was it "the best"? The device driver support was FUBARed. It took them ages to get past or even acknowledge the single message queue issue. There's no such thing IMNVHO, there's only fit for purpose. Lifestyle choices are for people without lives.
Then go with a no-name product straight from a prison labor camp. People who buy the cheapest model that "meets spec" usually pay their money to learn a lesson in "value."In this case hardware with more processing power and more abilities.
Then go with a no-name product straight from a prison labor camp. People who buy the cheapest model that "meets spec" usually pay their money to learn a lesson in "value."
So you consider an iPod a a "no-name" product but isn't the iPod a "name" product?
How did you get from what Phyz said to this? He's talking about computers, not digital audio players, and as you said, the iPod is anything but a no-name product.
I thought he was just talking about computer hardware and the terrible conditions and given the terrible conditions of the workers n the regards to the manufacturing of its iPods in my opinion means that Apple has absolutely no credibility in regards to being an ethical company - "Designed in California - built by slaves in China" would be a more honest by line on its products!![]()
Yes, there's definitely a case to answer there, but it doesn't meet Phyz' twin conditions of being a no-name product built in a prison camp. He's talking cheap and nasty. iPods are neither, even if the factories that produce them are...
The user interface on those things is terrible. If a menu is open, you can't control the volume. If you're trying to scroll down a menu, you always reach a point where you're fiddling between three different options, skipping the one in the middle that you actually want (especailly if the touch pad is getting a little old.) There's no simple on/off switch. You have to read through manuals to figure that out.Ipods are a perfect example of an unexceptional product with intelligent marketing that won out against its competitors.
The user interface on those things is terrible. If a menu is open, you can't control the volume. If you're trying to scroll down a menu, you always reach a point where you're fiddling between three different options, skipping the one in the middle that you actually want (especailly if the touch pad is getting a little old.) There's no simple on/off switch. You have to read through manuals to figure that out.
I'm tired of hearing about how "intuitive" they are. That's a total lie. Intuitive would be a volume knob, two up/down scroll buttons that doubled as FF/RW, and an on/off switch. Apple may have designed a device with a nice aesthetic, but intuitive? Ha!
Then go with a no-name product straight from a prison labor camp. People who buy the cheapest model that "meets spec" usually pay their money to learn a lesson in "value."
I musta got lost. I don't recall reading that specific claim. Dell? Kindly point me to it.The claim was that Dell would not have a significant price difference compared to a MAC with the same specs.
No one who hates iPods should ever get one. Apple will buck up and try to survive without your patronage.The user interface on those things is terrible.