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Replacing my Small form factor PC with a Mac Mini
dazn12
Posts: 6,912
Forum Member
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Hi guys,
Over a year ago I bought a Small Form Factor PC from Acer that had Windows 7 installed. Unfortunately it packed in yesterday and my years warranty has expired.
I was saving up for a Macbook Pro to have as a secondary computer but now that this has happened, I think I might go straight into a Mac and buy a Mac Mini.
I would rather buy a system that is small and compact as the room I'll be using it in is quite tight for space.
I just wanted some advice though, Having used a PC for years this will be my first step in migrating. I have a few questions that I'm hoping some forum members may be able to answer.
- I'll need to find some Mac alternatives to some software such as a video converter and a webpage editor. I've been using Freemake Video Converter and Kompozer on Windows. Are there any software that will allow me to do the same on a Mac?
- Would you say the Mac Mini could work as a primary PC replacement? I understand it has all the hardware it needs but being so small, I can't help but wonder if its a computer that isn't intended for daily long time use (8-10 hours daily)
Thanks guys
Over a year ago I bought a Small Form Factor PC from Acer that had Windows 7 installed. Unfortunately it packed in yesterday and my years warranty has expired.
I was saving up for a Macbook Pro to have as a secondary computer but now that this has happened, I think I might go straight into a Mac and buy a Mac Mini.
I would rather buy a system that is small and compact as the room I'll be using it in is quite tight for space.
I just wanted some advice though, Having used a PC for years this will be my first step in migrating. I have a few questions that I'm hoping some forum members may be able to answer.
- I'll need to find some Mac alternatives to some software such as a video converter and a webpage editor. I've been using Freemake Video Converter and Kompozer on Windows. Are there any software that will allow me to do the same on a Mac?
- Would you say the Mac Mini could work as a primary PC replacement? I understand it has all the hardware it needs but being so small, I can't help but wonder if its a computer that isn't intended for daily long time use (8-10 hours daily)
Thanks guys
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I too am used to Freemake on my PC but I haven't looked for a replacement to run on a Mac yet, there is Handbrake but the input and output formats are more limited so it depends on your needs whether it'll do the job for you.
it hasn't been physically powered off since i bought it.
video converter - handbrake
web editor - textwrangler (free) or coda (pay)
One thing I would say though is that now they have made them more accessible to work on (no more putty knives) it would make more financial sense to purchase a lower end model and seek a RAM/HDD upgrade elsewhere as Apple really screw you over when you adjust the base config.
It might be worth buying their one-to-one support for a year if you have an apple store near where you live - you can just go in and ask them anything for a year.
When I went to play with Macs in an Apple store, you just find it's all those little things you know in Windows (e.g. certain keyboard shortcuts) that you need to re-learn for OS X.
and remember, you can run windows on it too using "boot camp" or via virtual installation, so if you ever have a problem finding a particular app, you can also quickly boot into windows.
Note that although memory is now much easier to get at on Minis (it's a plastic cover that takes a few seconds to get off, it's now officially user-servicable and paying £80 to go from 4GB to 8GB is mad) the hard drive is substantially more annoying to work on, ideally requires a special tool to help you remove the main logic board and is certainly not a job for the faint-hearted. I've changed RAM and disk drives in plenty of putty-knife Mac Minis, and RAM in new metal ones, but I think I'd be happy to pay someone else to do a disk drive swap on a new Mini.
I disagree about the One to One support at the Apple Store. I think the OP would be better off buying a decent book on Mac OSX and signing up to forums like MacRumors. And then of course there's the Mac users on here Plus the Apple Stores have free workshops. But that's my opinion. I think One to One is rubbish and not really worth the £79 you pay for it. I never really saw the appeal of the service. Who wants to sit in an Apple Store doing those sessions when there are better things to be doing? I used to say that I'd rather watch Ocean Finance TV while eating glass than do the one-on-ones at Apple, but now that channel has closed down I have to find an alternative channel to watch. Now, where did I leave my TV remote?
Alt routes are, the vast amount of online resources particularly Apples own online resources such as http://support.apple.com/videos/, plus the forums already mentioned.
Others include:
http://macmost.com/
http://www.youtube.com/user/TheMacUdotcom/videos
http://www.youtube.com/user/lyndapodcast/videos (PC and Mac Videos)
http://mac.tutsplus.com/category/tutorials/
We added another Mac, a Mac Mini to the house the other day replacing the last PC. PC World Black Friday saved £50.
Enjoy.
It's £79 for the year and then of course you need the time to go to the Apple Store and do it. I would never sign up for One to One as I have better things to do I've read of One to One members who go for sessions every day and seem almost devoted to their One to One sessions! Now that is just unhealthy IMO and those kind of people need to get a life. Think of all the other things you could be doing instead! You could be watching the shopping channels, Ocean Finance TV, Fox News, trading your gold for cash, playing bingo, claiming back your mis-sold PPI, filing an injury claim, taking out a new insurance policy (and get a free meerkat)... I could go on OK, I watch too much TV lol
Download and install KompoZer for OSX. I found it a bit buggy but it might have improved by now.
Video conversion:
Handbrake (as suggested above)
MacTheRipper
MPEG streamclip
ffmpegX
Perian
Flip4Mac (free version)
Also pay the small fee for QuickTime Pro and the MPEG2 component from Apple.
I have been cnbcwatcher.
I'm going to wait until my next pay day before I make a decision whether to stay with Windows or a Mac Mini (although im 60% sure I'll go with a mac)
remember even with the mini you can still use windows though.
just factor the licence cost in.
That's cool. The Mac Mini is the cheapest Mac around, so hopefully you can afford it. I hope you enjoy the Mac if you get it though Oh and if you buy from the Apple Store don't sign up for the training classes
Oh I've heard about how the training courses aren't exactly as nice as they make out them to be
I suppose the only thing that's holding me back is that whatever I buy, I'll be using as my main computer and that means it will be used daily, up to 10 hours a day (possibly on all weekend). It would need to handle Photoshop and the occasional video converting. I guess just by looking at it and how it fits in the palm of your hand almost, can a device at that size outperform a mini desktop?
How did you find out? Was it from me? I'm pleased you won't be doing the one to one sessions. You'd be better off watching crap TV. Pity Ocean Finance TV closed down Oh well, watch the shopping channels instead! Or the payday loan and PPI adverts on a loop.
won't be a problem at all.
They aren't the simplest of tasks. Why are there better specs if a mini can do everything?
I ask seriously because I don't like people having false expectations.
The mini I had couldn't even run code for iPhone let alone Photoshop!!!
but for 99% of things a mac mini's fine and i'll probably look into one soon for a media centre so a second hand one will be fine
which mini was that then?
a basic mac mini will run photoshop fine, and should have no problems running xcode either.
I dont mean simulated, but debugging on iphone hardware.
The super mini about 3 years ago, with 2GB ram.
Seriously though, if a Mini can run photoshop and video editing then why are there faster Macs? There shouldn't be a need for them. It seems Apple disagree.