In all fairness, apples high end desktop computers are far superior to what PCs could deliver.
Okay, here's the thing.
There is no fair comparison between "Mac" and "PC". There just isn't. "Mac" is a subset of "PC", albeit possibly with some very, very slightly nonstandard aspects to it.
Apple has engendered this perspective (that your choice is between "Mac" and "PC") in order to differentiate themselves from the competition, even long after the difference has become silly and moot.
So comparing "Apple" with "PC" is completely silly. Comparing Apple to Dell, or Apple to HP, fine. But not Apple to "PC". A "PC" (i.e. a non-Apple PC) can deliver whatever the hell you want it to, and at a variety of price points that vary depending on the manufacturer, if there indeed is a manufacturer at all who isn't you yourself.
completely agree.
But, the argument that apple only charges more money without delivering more performance is wrong there at least.
Not really, no. Apple has a history of being pricey for a given set of specs.
Read above the statement which I agreed with. Apple's pricing can be justified very easily if you compare it in a certain way, and that's even excluding the software. I have at several times compared apple pricing to high end windows-based pc's and found them comparable or cheaper for equal components. They force you to buy a certain level of product (like high end monitors and processors), and they bundle things you might never use (like a 6-button remote control, a fancy touch sensitive mouse, or a mid-to-high range webcam), but the prices are not that far off the market. For example, compare my favorite PC builder and a high end iMac (medium-high computer).
http://store.apple.com/us/configure/MC511LL/A?mco=MTg1ODA4MDMhttp://www.pugetsystems.com/?u=57954The prices are almost identical, I didn't include a webcam, and the keyboard isn't wireless. The graphics card isn't the
exact same, but it's the closes I could get price wise (above the one that's lower, and below the one that's higher).
Also, never compare apple to self-built or bargain pc's. Self-built cut's out a HUGE part of the cost of building a pc. Bargain PC's are sold at very little to no profit, have notoriously poor quality componants, and often include crapware in order to drive down the cost more. A sly user can uninstall all the crapware, but people like my mother keep it on there thinking it's supposed to be there. Then people like me are forced to use it, and it is annoying as HFS and frame-rate deaths.
I was refering to their mac pro computers, those are siginificantely faster than any desktop computer. Also comparing processor frequencies between apple and PC processors is meaniless, the chips architecture is quite different. A 3ghz mac processor will be a lot faster a 3ghz PC processor.
you're still on the timeline when they used PowerPCs. With the switch to intel they are the
exact same architecture. a 3Ghz core 2 duo mac processor is the exact same as the 3Ghz core 2 duo pc processor you get somewhere else. If you get a high end Xeon based computer from dell, the processor will be the same speed as that on the mac. If you get the same graphics card and a comparable speed motherboard, and run ubuntu or windows on either, the speed should be the exact same as well.
And than theres the models that use not one but two of those processors, and the ones that use 6 cored processors, etc etc.
Of course all that will cost you gobs of money, but that wasnt the point I was making there. What I was saying that these things may cost a ton, but at least perform in proportian to that. They fill a niche in between desktop PCs and full blown server grade computers (which in turn make mac pros look like a kiddy computers).
@ more recent post: You can definetely compare Apples and PCs. Apple desings its whole own computers, most of its hardware is incompatible with PCs. As such you can define both PC and Apple hardware as their own distinct appoaches to desktop computing, and compare their results.
most of it's hardware is compatible with PC's. With the mac pro, you can interchange ram, processor, graphics cards, webcams, monitors, mice, and keyboards, and almost all other peripherals. Anything you can't change in an iMac or laptop is because of form factor or security. where can you find a graphics card that fits into an iMac? or for that matter, a replacement motherboard that has the chip proving it's a mac, thus allowing Mac OSX to install?