No - it does not have a wart.
Are you sure about that? That would be the older model.
No - it does not have a wart.
And that's why I like it.To be fair, the cat nipple allows you to scroll horizontally as well a vertically.
it hides its functionality under its design.
This is my biggest complaint about Apple hardware in general. I want a button to eject my CD(the internal optical drives actually have buttons, they are just covered up). I want a volume knob. I want a light to tell me when the hard drive is working. I want to be able to see the power button. I want to be able to plug in a USB device without having to crawl behind the machine. I want a mouse that fits in my hand and gives me some kind if tactile feedback when I do something with it. I use my machine I don't admire it from across the room. I want a Humvee, not a Hummer! |
No - it does not have a wart.
but it hides its functionality under its design.
You ever installed a device on Windows without having the right driver handy? Of discover that your favourite/most useful device is no longer supported after a mandatory "security" upgrade?Form over function = Piss on the user.
Imagine for a moment that Microsoft decided that the entire Microsoft Office suit would come pre-installed with all copies of Windows. You don't get a choice, it comes with the OS. Do you think they would be allowed to do that without a fight? The US justice department intervened when Microsoft tried to put IE on the desktop of all Windows installations.
Macs come with whole bunch of "i" software pre-installed and already in the doc. The consumer doesn't get a choice. This is praised as making the machine more useful out of the box. Two different companies, two different sets of rules. If Apple had a bigger share of the market it would probably be different.
You ever installed a device on Windows without having the right driver handy? Of discover that your favourite/most useful device is no longer supported after a mandatory "security" upgrade?
That's what happens when no-one follows the published Windows standard, least of all the publisher, and that standard changes at some Redmond nerd's whim anyway. You do know Microsoft has big shares in Intel?
As opposed to Apple, where the standard is enforced...so things DO work, and CONTINUE to work, even after many upgrades. Call it limiting the possibilities, sure. But the function DOES follow the form.![]()
And I HATE even more those people who are conciliatory to both sides! GRRR!![]()
I started on a Mac. Well, if you don't count the TRS-80 and Microbee.
When I first decided to start using a computer for my assignments I walked into the IBM lab, sat down at a machine and looked at it.
It said "A:\_"
And that was all.
I got up and went next door to the Mac lab. Someone showed me how to put a boot disk in and click on things to make them work. I never set foot again into the IBM lab.
These days, it's all a matter of opinion and preference. There's no functional reason to choose Mac over Windows, or vice versa. They can both do the same stuff. Sure, there are more viruses and stuff for Windows - a legacy of the market share. It's all about what you like.