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Someone recently commented that he was surprised I don’t use a Macintosh computer. Macs are the cool things to get these days and i can understand why he would assume I’d want to use one.

At the same time, I take immense pleasure in researching and buying the best things in the world, so I’ll explain why the Mac didn’t make the cut.

I need a laptop. Considering my perpetual state of traveling, this is an obvious one. If I had a desktop there’s an excellent chance I would have a Mac.

The OS

The strongest asset that the Mac has is it’s operating system, OS/X. This operating system is light years ahead of the competition. Vista is a total piece of junk. I like Windows XP just fine, but I’m well aware of it’s many shortcomings relative to Mac OS.

In fact, if I could run OS/X on my laptop, I’d do it in a second. I tried this unsupported transplant once but it didn’t quite work. From what I understand it all works now except for suspend and hibernate, which I can’t live without.

So none of this a criticism of the operating system. There are a few Windows programs that I’d hate to give up, but the software for the Mac is generally very high quality and quite often superior to its PC counterpart.

But let me make one thing clear – Windows XP is totally fine. I have software that does everything I could possibly want to do. I have modified my themes and such to make it look as minimal and neat as I could possibly want.

People like to whine about it because it’s old, but it works. It does almost nothing that I don’t like or couldn’t fix.

Yes, Mac OS is better. It’s more fun. I like linux. But not having MacOS is not impacting me in any negative way.

In my opinion, Macs have ZERO other benefits. You can talk about all the little things like the built in cameras and good bundled software or design, but at the end of the day, none of those things matter to me at all.

There are two major things preventing me from getting a Mac. There are little things I don’t like too, like the general form over function attitude (yeah yeah, argue all you want), but these two things are showstoppers.

#1 Terrible Screen Resolution

I need high resolution. I like to see a lot of detail when I’m working in Photoshop or Lightroom. I keep all of my fonts and UI elements insanely small. This looks terrible and unusable on a lower resolution screen.

My 12″ laptop screen does 1400×1050. I would like it to be higher, but that’s pretty good. A 15″ Macbook (which is WAY too big for me) only does 1280×768 TK

Could I get used to a lower resolution? Kind of. I had a backup laptop that I used when I had my main one repaired. It was usable but very annoying. Screen resolution is a real productivity increaser in the real world, and I’m not ready to give it up.

#2 Terrible Pointing Device

I hate trackpads. Not just the Mac ones (from what I understand, they are the best trackpads you can have), but all trackpads.

The trackpad is a terrible way to interact with your computer. The eraserpoint that ThinkPads have is perfect in every way. It is the ideal pointing device. I like it much better than even a standalone mouse.

Here’s the main reason: I barely have to move my hands to use it. My wrist pivots and my thumb and forefinger use the eraserpoint while the rest of my fingers stay an the keys.

With a trackpad I have to move my whole hand down and back. This sounds like no big deal until you master the eraserpoint and experience the sheer joy of effortlessly moving between keyboard and mouse without moving your hands.

This is another gamestopper. I will not use a laptop with a trackpad. I’ve had them before, used them for months, and still hated them.

And I don’t need this fancy multitouch crap. This is another example of flash over function. It doesn’t make things faster, it makes things cooler. One matters, one doesn’t.

So that’s why I don’t use a Mac, and probably never will. I believe that they will eventually increase the screen resolution, but I don’t think that they will ever get rid of that ridiculous trackpad.

The problem is that the trackpads are much easier to use for new users. Laptops with them sell better because the laptop is immediately more usable. Then these people get hooked on them, not knowing that if they spent a month or so with the eraserpoint, they would like it a lot more. Not everyone, mind you, but most people.

This phenomenon has caused trackpads to become the dominant pointing device, and I doubt that will change.

Maybe they will eventually allow OS/X on PCs and I can have the best of both worlds.


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There are 22 Comments.


Lori
Jul 21st, 2008 @ 7:24 pm

Totally agree with you on all those points. I always loved macs actually but I’m in graphic design work. Have a macbook pro through my school, which did come with the 1440 res a year ago, so you’re a bit behind on that.

But I hate the touchpad, can’t get used to using it for design work, which means I have to bring a mouse with me, and like most notebooks I have this huge gap from the edge of the notebook to the keys filled with the useless trackpad, making the keyboard uncomfortable.

I really would love a Cintiq one of these days for the work I do, and I use a Wacom pad now a lot. Also I far prefer a big screen to work on. So by the time I plug in everything to work comfortably at home, I’ve negated all the bonuses of it being a laptop. Of course portability is of use at times, but I’m much less productive without all the extra stuff plugged in.

I drooled a bit at the Lenovo touchscreen models, but from everything I read the graphic capability is pretty weak in them for 3d work and can’t be upgraded, and the touch screens aren’t anywhere close to a Wacom. Oh well, hoping they move in that direction.

Anyway decided to sell the macbook and get a desktop which I’ll find some way to stow securely in the RV. Monitor will go on the nice moveable TV arm, and a wireless keyboard and mouse and I can have a much more powerful and comfortable setup. Of course this is only portable enough if I can power it and work in the RV, but for now I don’t think that’s a problem.

Jul 22nd, 2008 @ 9:54 am

my macbook pro has a resolution of 1920×1200… i have never used an eraser point extensively so i guess i don’t know what i’m missing, however i will agree the trackpad is less than ideal. i travel with a nano logitech cordless mouse that works great, but i do still miss my desktop imac.


elai
Jul 22nd, 2008 @ 10:11 am

13″ Macbooks have a 1280×800 widescreen & 15″ Macbook pros have a 1440×900 widescreen, & 17″ Huegbooks can have 1020p screen.

Unfortunately, your two wants a generally not what the general laptop buying populace would want. The thinkpad nib does take some time to get to use to, and I’ve heard plenty of complaints about it. People saying they loathe and hate it. And the high res on a very small screen is fairly unlikely until you get resolution independence in the GUI. A lot of people start getting eyestrain problems at that fine a detail.

Jul 22nd, 2008 @ 1:39 pm

I think I mentioned that I as surprised you didn’t use a Mac. Mac may seem to favor form over function in the UI, but really the simplicity of it makes it more productive. You also have the full power of Unix/Linux at your fingertips. So even though some configurations aren’t offered in the UI, they are offered through the command line. Plus Mac has TextMate, the most efficient IDE I’ve ever used. Enough to make me stop using my Windows dev PC for more than testing out IE.

I understand the resolution problem, I dock mine with a 22″ Widescreen at home. However as others mentioned, your sizes are off. I’m cruising with 1400×900.

I prefer the trackpad to a mouse for coding for the same reasons you like the eraser. You can quickly move it with your thumbs while leaving your hands on the keys (at least I can). But with a mouse you have to keep moving. For graphics/photoshop I do prefer a mouse, a tablet would probably be better. I’m sure more people don’t implement an eraser is because it’s patented. I haven’t used an eraser enough to have an opinion on it vs the trackpad. But you’re right, can’t get that on a Mac so if it’s your preferred pointing device then you’ll have to stick to PC.

The best part about the Macbook hardware isn’t the integrated camera. It’s the simplicity of the design, very sleek and functional. When I needed a new laptop, coming from a Windows world, I searched around for the best. I fell in love with the Macbook design and figured if I didn’t like OSX I’d just install Windows. I installed Windows as a dual boot and never used it. OSX does everything I needed before and more. I’m ready to get a Mac desktop now to replace my PC. The point is, if your Mac has an eraser pointer you could get a Macbook and run Windows and OSX.

Jul 22nd, 2008 @ 3:09 pm

I just bought an imac. I’ll never go back to PC, which is saying something because I’ve been using one for 15+ years, since the 286s.

I thought I’d hate it, but gave in… now I love it. Get stuff done way quicker now.

Jul 22nd, 2008 @ 6:50 pm

Tynan, thanks for supporting the PC platform. I know it wasn’t really what you are doing, but in my reality it was.

-Alex


Patrick
Jul 22nd, 2008 @ 10:59 pm

I used to have a Dell D600 with OS X on it, back when the OSx86 Project was new and exciting. It had a nub mouse, 1400×1050 screen, and worked great. This was at a private high school where everyone had the same school-approved Dell. The OS was nice, but the only feature I enjoyed and couldn’t get from Windows XP was the ability to surprise people who were looking over my shoulder. And Counter Strike ran slower during history class. Bummer.

Jul 23rd, 2008 @ 12:00 am

This is a completely unrelated (and possibly pointless) comment, but I recently found your page via Google and I must say that you have some of the most interesting posts that I have seen on the internet. Your stories are fascinating and your mindset is similar to my own. Especially, your obsession with finding the best out of everything from products to everyday activities. Though, unlike the majority of your readers (from what I’ve seen), I’m not too interested in your pickup stuff. Everything else friggin’ rocks though. Just letting you know that you have a new reader.


Emilio
Jul 23rd, 2008 @ 6:33 am

erasepoint ??
I have been using IBM/Lenovo now for years (I am with my forth one actually), and that is not a erase point, is a delicious nipple of control, any other way to call it is understimate it
like always, a pleasure to read you


Matt
Jul 23rd, 2008 @ 2:34 pm

Hey everybody, Tynan wants a 12″ screen with a 1400×1050 resolution. The small screen size is key.

I am also a disciple of the Thinkpad and nub mouse.


Dan
Jul 23rd, 2008 @ 4:36 pm

Thinkpad “clit mouse” FTW!

Jul 24th, 2008 @ 9:02 am

Tynan,

I use a Mac and your points make complete sense. People have different needs and wants and all 3 of the OSes are serve different ones. I recently switched to a Mac, though I used them a ton during the OS9 era. I used Linux the past 3 years and XP from before that. I just have a few views…

MultiTouch is not all show, its phenomenal. I personally hate having to use the thumb button on laptops (which is a huge criticism for me on the clit pointer, which I had on an older laptop), and I haven’t used mine in months. Clicking, Dragging and Right clicking can all be done on multitouch. Coupled with the keyboard (the REAL way to get around your computer) makes it a phenomenal experience. I am not degrading the eraser point, but just having to have my thumb on the button(s) would drive me insane.

Design is all about how it works and OSX has that in spades. You say that the OS is the only thing that Apple has over the others, but let me ask you this honestly as possible.

What else is there?

If we remove the OSes, what are we left with? Minute changes in case styling, and whatever pointer you chose.

Just food for thought.

Keep on truckin’ man

-Lucas


Lori
Jul 24th, 2008 @ 10:20 am

Ah yea the 12″ sizes are sweet and I can see where you’d want higher res on those. My 15″ is about the biggest I can imagine porting around, it’s not too bad but smaller would be better. The MacBookAir’s keep nagging at me but they just don’t have the power yet for what I need, maybe the next gens will.

MultiTouch though is that awesome huh? Haven’t used it yet for a computer, I wondered a bit about that since my older one doesn’t have it. My ideal laptop I think though would have no KB or pad at all, just the computer under a small touch screen. Haven’t seen anything like that though.

Jul 24th, 2008 @ 11:37 am

I would switch to a mac if they incorporated a damn right click button!


Pete
Jul 24th, 2008 @ 8:07 pm

I couldn’t live without a multi-touch mouse anymore – the ease of scrolling – in both directions – is awesome

-P


Brian
Jul 25th, 2008 @ 3:57 am

Arun, not having a right click was very frustrating at first, now I would rather have 1 big long ‘left’ click on my laptop versus a split track pad. with 2 buttons for left and right click. Tynan is probably right, the macs trackpads are probably the best.

scroll with 1 finger
tap the pad with 1 finger-left click
tap the pad with 2 fingers-right click
scroll down a page- anywhere on the trackpad with 2 fingers not just to the very right.

You can’t live without your nub mouse, I’m lost without Spotlight or Expose (hot corners)

Jul 25th, 2008 @ 3:56 pm

I’ve been using PCs for so long. I bought one macbook 6 months ago and I have to say that this is the best I’ve ever done (talking about computers). I work as a computer engineer so I spend so much time working with a computer. I feel so good when I go home and use my mac instead the PC of the office.
I think trackpad is something you get used to. I think, trackpads in mac are the best I’ve ever test because the many posibilities it have depending if you touch it with one finger or two. It can be so good if you get use to it.
Another thing I like about the macbook is the 5 hours the battery lasts and the weight it has. I think it would be so good for someone travelling that much. I use to travel so much too, and that’s why this is so comfortable for me.
Talking about the OS, I’ve been using Windows for a long time, and even Linux, and I would not go back to them now that I use MacOs. I had many problems with Windows having to format the computer several times, and it doesn’t happen with MacOs (at least for what I heard).
We all know everybody have its owns likes, but I’m so happy to have changed to Mac. I think that if you use it, you don’t leave it.

Jul 25th, 2008 @ 7:30 pm

Lori,

Multi-touch is that awesome. While I would say the majority of my commands to my computer are done with the keyboard (I couldn’t imagine a computer without a tactile sense of control), when it comes to needing it, I love the multitouch.

If you haven’t checked it out, you should try out Quicksilver. Launching apps and executing other commands becomes one of the most fluid things ever with it.

Pete,

I hear you man, Expose is phenomenal. I use spaces as well to keep my apps organized as well.


Austin Bender
Jul 27th, 2008 @ 7:48 pm

I used to work at apple and the ‘zazz always seems more important than the functionality. I’m by no means the most knowledgeable person here. I remember when I worked there they would speak of how awesome the hardware was (and it was) and that being a good reason to use it. This concept simplified, pretty much, mac has made some bad ass hardware that has been imitated but not so often duplicated. Their line of printers put their line of printers out of business, and it took 10~15 years for the rest of the market to catch up. (Apple laser printers rocked) They switched their chipset to intel in recent times… now before this, all I heard was smack about how intel was cheap and crappy by the Apple cultists, and some still stay true (to both apple and their point.) Apple doing this really sold them to someone other than me.. I mean, if your going to form essentially a cult around your technology, stay true to it.

First time I used photoshop or any other application within the same genre, it was on a power mac back in ’96ish or something like that. It was pretty cool… not necessarily on point, just seems like all you have with mac these days is nostalgia, old innovations (and a few new ones still), and too much flair.

Vista is the largest turd any company has ever tried to force down customers throats… If you disagree, then I’m glad it works for you.

I like your blog man! Have to get a drink when you aren’t traveling around (and if you are still in Austin)


Vlad
Jul 30th, 2008 @ 12:54 am

What if, you get a nice travel bag, a wireless mouse, and the most powerful 17″ macbook pro you can purchase, with 1980×1200 resolution. while you’re at it, stockpile a healthy dose of “Professional” applications, such as windows xp on a mac, either using bootcamp or VMware Fusion to get “the best of both worlds”. logic, final cut, aperture/lightroom, and add-in the apple iWork to achieve a perfect unison of a melodic workflow.

To suit your Extreme photo adjesting needs, purchase photoshop for mac, which comes extra 200MB of data added unto the mac version of the software, compared to the windows edition. after you spend the fortune to completely swap from the realm on 1995 windows (and all the software accompanying the investment), you will have a modern machine capable of outperforming any windows laptop in the industry, and still be able to enjoy all the features you want a consumer computer to accomplish. these features range from, chatting with friends, adjusting photos, movies, websites, blogs, myspace, and also web browsing.

However, if you were to be a serious “Creative Professional” you would look into the opportunity apple provides, openly, for any aspiring programmer/photographer/overall-genius. to have a computer is to have a portable office, where the tools needed to perform sophisticated coding and data-writing are always there for you to grab on the go. In my experience, windows offers zero to none consumer satisfaction, ease of use, overall efficiency. while apple not only provides the hardware,software, OS, and tutorials, they also stuff their best coding tools and automation utilities within the bundled software of the OS.

Apple.com will be your one-stop-shop for tutorials, purchasing anything-to-everything, and information. research this website of all the information about mac. spend over 10 hours on it, and find the joy everyone is having from their newly adopted lifestyle. It’s not a question of what is the best, for clearly mac is a winner. For someone claiming to be a “proffesional” whom only chooses the best in the world would simply buy a mac. Although to choose PC over Mac only has two categories to draw from:
Ignorance or stupidity.

It just seems like you don’t want to spend an extra $160 stacked on-top the laptop, for a travel-bag and mouse. Which tend to make your appearance of a sophisticated professional even brighter in the world of money hungry businessmen.

You see Ty, instead of the PC world, you don’t buy the notebook and stockpile 3rd party programs from different developers from around the world to complete your petty job requirements. With mac, you purchase the software, OS, Hardware, And complete support with wonderful and knowledgeable tech support with insurance. Also, you have the option of getting a .mac account, which is email and other fascinating functions, such as an idisk (internet storage utility).

It’s simply convenient to use one solution for your multible projects, without having to deal with microsoft and all your other 3rd party programmers and developers. Mac offers it all.

- Buy mac. :)


Vlad
Jul 30th, 2008 @ 12:55 am

no offense, it’s just a thought.

Aug 7th, 2008 @ 7:49 pm

Vlad(previous commenter) wants you to buy a Mac. It’s just a thought.

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