Microsoft Warns Windows 7 Has Serious Problems
This is why people do not trust business. These statements have no basis in fact, for the reasons outlined, in addition, MS has a responsibility to tell users of any threats. W10 still has issues with bad updates that trash machines and become virtually impossible to undo unless you are failry savvy. I know several people who complain they bought machines and then they just trashed themselves, and every one had W10, and there had just been updates issue. Sure enough you go look and users complain of updates that did just that, but they were able to find workarounds. These hings lead the sheeple to not trust companies, and not upgrade. Honest, open business is what they need to practice, not this type of fear mongering. Sounds a lot like some political party crap to me...
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Just talked to my son.
He said he may switch at the end of the year and his only reason would be video games, which I'm not really inro.
A simple easily accessed quickfire beat the clock eight ball game that ain't eight ball at all is the only PC video game I play once or twice a day.
To beat the clock at Level Nine is a great game for me. I've only managed to reach Level 10 twice. Levels 7 and 8 are average.
Windows 10 can do their own fixing.
I'm happy with what I ain't fixing got.
At the same time though, Microsoft's annual unit sales have been shrinking by double-digit percentages annually, with the same numbers pretty much going to the Apple side, or people just deciding they don't need a PC anymore (common to the elderly for example that are happy with their iPad). Mac sales are down a bit in the last quarter, but Apple also released the iPad Pro at the same time, which is pretty much a laptop. Heck, I'll probably move to one eventually, I like light, not bulky.
When you consider though that the Mac market is a single vendor, versus 100s or 1000s in the PC space, it's pretty obvious that Mac is a big ticket item for Apple's bottom line.
Although, with half a trillion or so in the bank, I don't think any one item in their portfolio helps or hurts them particularly other than the iPhone.
The growth of Mac is obviously iOS... Android is obviously a competitor with marketshare, but I've had both and I really don't think Android compares much in terms of quality or workmanship, I think the open aspect of its OS is the lure for technical folks and the cheaper price tag is the lure for others.
I use all of the above for various things obviously, but when I travel across the US, bring a projector and need to do a cyber security presentation and it -MUST- work and -MUST- be reliable, I'm grabbing the Macbook obviously... I'd never risk it on on a PC. I don't have problems with them often, or even once a year, but it always seems to be something at the worst possible time... or just that infinite boot up thing drives me nuts. Heck, the MacBook is up & ready before I have the laptop open and in the right spot for my hands to type it seems like.
The millennials entering the workforce at some point in leadership positions will be a game changer though, my son is 23 and in college, you don't see a PC anywhere... about 30% of our consulting work is for higher ed institutions and the top 5 or so K-12 districts... same thing, I can look at device-counts on any given education network and the numbers are exactly flip-flopped... 90% Mac & iOS versus about 10% something-other. We can identify the Apple devices pretty easily by their hardware MAC address on the network when they request a DHCP, the pre-amble to the request is the manufacture designation, so Apple is all in one family basically, with all-else in the others pile.
People have always thought that the lack (like practically zero) virus issues for Macs are because of the small marketshare, but that isn't true, the closed/known hardware aspect with zero variations in hardware drivers, closed OS, and unix foundation of it are all pretty strong adversaries to any kind of malware or viruses. Microsoft has to manage a planet load of hardware ecosystem, where Apple only knows what it has and has to worry about it. Combine with that the unix security model, no registry junk to get corrupted, very little shared system files for applications, and unix networking, antivirus is really just kind of optional on a Mac.. and not something you really need to pay for, the freebies are fine.
So from a cost perspective... you figure an average 7 year life of a Mac, plus the free OS, and the free/zero-need for the McAfee cartels, and you pretty easily get to Mac being a lot cheaper... probably cheaper than even the $250 junk at Walmart to be honest, if you are comparing 'apples to apples', no pun intended, of high performance/high quality construction WinTel to a MacBook for example, there isn't a big difference in the upfront cost, but the advantage goes heavily Mac in the out-years.
Ethics rarely win over threat of extinction.
So do old windows machines and old linux machines. My 1985 compaq transportable still works. I agree, term2, but newer equipment often does the same jobs better, faster, and allow additional functionality.
There are advantages to each platform. More in the market bought windows, but that doesn't mean they are right (or wrong.) It does likely mean that the x86-windows hardware will be less expensive due to the volume. Even that is becoming less important with more powerful phones, watches, raspberryPi's, etc, taking some of the tasks that bigger hardware had to do in the past.
The big news is the return of Windows 95 (joke):
http://www.geek.com/games/someone-got...
Life goes on (grin)
IMHO the press put out on issues with Windows 7 have more to do with MS wanting to cast it aside for the more covert collecting of data and information that comes with Windows 10.
I use Linux Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and it runs great without any issues. It doesn't even require anti-virus or anti-malware software. Now and then it receives updates to keep it running smoothly. And if on the rare occasion a program crashes, that is all that crashes the program NOT the entire OS.
I kind of game up on Windows gaming though, got frustrating over time, I'm kind of sold on the console route but I'm looking for some better add-on hardware for it over time (VR headsets for example), but I'll probably dive into the PlayStation 4 world I think. I've never actually bought one before, but I don't play games very often anymore either.
Porting Star Citizen to Mac wouldn't be tough for the developer, OS X is actually almost entirely BSD Unix with whiz-bang GUI on it. If you open a terminal window on OS X, it's very obviously BSD immediately.
There are just too many horror stories associated with Win 10. I've disabled the nagging Win 10 update icon in the System Tray and as much of the "tracking/snooping" features in Win 7 as I am aware of.
I run a dual-boot system with Ubuntu Linux and Windows. The software I depend on doesn't run on Linux, else I'd heave MS overboard instantly.
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