OSX replace Windows if hardware were cheaper?
lalaland
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Having just recently made the jump from Windows to OSX after many, many years of DOS and Windows usage I'm completely amazed at how good OSX and Apple hardware actually is.
My initial plan was to jump to the Macbook Pro and install Windows 7 on it using Bootcamp so I could still rely on Windows for certain tasks and software. However, since moving across I have found absolutely no need for Windows whatsoever, nor have I missed it in the slightest. As such my Windows 7 disk has now been placed in a drawer to gather dust.
The MacBook Pro is a joy to use and OSX feels like an operating system that works perfectly and reliably. Little perks here and there make it fun and easy to use and the transition between the two was also easy.
The only downside to all of this was the price. My MacBook Pro is the base model which normally retails at £999.99 (I didn't pay that thanks to some discounts etc.). For a laptop with similar spec running Windows I could have paid much less and had a lot of change to spend on other things. Having said that, I wouldn't now be enjoying the quality of the MacBook Pro.
It got me thinking, if Apple were to slash their hardware prices by about half it would seriously cause Microsoft some trouble. If you could head out and pick up a MacBook Pro for £500 say, instead of just under £1k I think there'd quickly be a shortage of them while at the same time places like PC World would be wondering why their Windows 8 laptops are sat on the shelves.
I don't want to start a Windows vs Mac war and in the past I'll admit I've sat using Windows and laughed at the thought of using OSX, but the whole Mac hardware and operating system is a joy to use and make me quickly forget about cheap off the shelf Windows laptops with a less enjoyable or stable operating system running on them.
I doubt it will ever happen because Apple know people want their kit and that they'll pay for it, but it makes you think. They could pretty much take over the home user market in one move.
My initial plan was to jump to the Macbook Pro and install Windows 7 on it using Bootcamp so I could still rely on Windows for certain tasks and software. However, since moving across I have found absolutely no need for Windows whatsoever, nor have I missed it in the slightest. As such my Windows 7 disk has now been placed in a drawer to gather dust.
The MacBook Pro is a joy to use and OSX feels like an operating system that works perfectly and reliably. Little perks here and there make it fun and easy to use and the transition between the two was also easy.
The only downside to all of this was the price. My MacBook Pro is the base model which normally retails at £999.99 (I didn't pay that thanks to some discounts etc.). For a laptop with similar spec running Windows I could have paid much less and had a lot of change to spend on other things. Having said that, I wouldn't now be enjoying the quality of the MacBook Pro.
It got me thinking, if Apple were to slash their hardware prices by about half it would seriously cause Microsoft some trouble. If you could head out and pick up a MacBook Pro for £500 say, instead of just under £1k I think there'd quickly be a shortage of them while at the same time places like PC World would be wondering why their Windows 8 laptops are sat on the shelves.
I don't want to start a Windows vs Mac war and in the past I'll admit I've sat using Windows and laughed at the thought of using OSX, but the whole Mac hardware and operating system is a joy to use and make me quickly forget about cheap off the shelf Windows laptops with a less enjoyable or stable operating system running on them.
I doubt it will ever happen because Apple know people want their kit and that they'll pay for it, but it makes you think. They could pretty much take over the home user market in one move.
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Comments
Why should they change what they are doing?
Only when their profits fall will they feel any need to reduce prices to drive up sales.
Finder is a joke of an implementation. I couldn't possibly enjoy using such a joke of file management.
Windows has it's benefits obviously, easier to upgrade a PC, more choice of software, etc. But I find all software I need is either available on OS X or there is a superior alternative.
Ever tried using Full Screen mode on a multiple monitor setup? Ewwww.
Agree with the OP though, I've generally been a Windows user at home but I've been a Mac user at work for a number of years. My next home machine will probably be an iMac.
XP is a seriously old OS now, though. It'd be a fairer comparison to compare to Win 7 or 8.
I have just moved from Windows 7 at home to OSX. I wasn't comparing the two, just pointing out that it's horrendous having to use XP at work.
Yea, very true that's not great, I never use them on my mac with two monitors, but you can still put apps on different spaces, which, with a simple gesture can be swiped through.
By comparison, I was setting up some Windows 8 laptops the other day and had NO IDEA how to do anything! What really annoyed me is the lack of a start button even if you drop through to the desktop. How does one launch programs or find out where they are? No doubt there is a way to get a start bar back again, but it niggled me.
Back to the original question... OS X can be installed on non-Apple hardware with a bit of shoehorning and technical know-how, but it's really designed to work with the Apple products. That's why it works so well, because they don't have to bloat it with drivers to handle the myriad of products that exist in the PC arena.
You're right... bring the cost of a Macbook Air down to the price point of a similar Windows ultrabook and there'd be no contest. But on the other hand, the Apple brand would lose some of its prestige.
And yet they still dont get it right. XCode beachballs all the time trying to debug iOS, especially older devices.
Well what does apple care about stuff that no longer brings it profit?
I think it's more a case of price rather than hardware.
Only a small number of users buy hardware brands specifically. The majority base their choice on cost with a close number looking at spec.
While I appreciate a minority will always want to pick and chose hardware, the majority just want something that works and looks good.
I think if it was a choice for your average user of a Toshiba, Dell, HP laptop in PC World for £350 or £400 for a MacBook Pro that the majority would jump on the latter.
I think the major bar for stopping Mac knocking windows off it's perch is cost. Drop the price, windows would quickly start vanishing from people's homes. Of course Apple won't do this, so windows is safe.
Most people live in browsers these days and Chrome on OSX is exactly the same as Chrome on Windows. The only major thing Apple in their favour is the quality of their hardware.
The issue is when people say their Lenovo G580 is as good as a MacBook Pro as its the same spec which just isn't true, the Lenovo is great for the price but I would ave got a MacBook if my budget stretched that far.
Yeah it's a pity really and keeps Apple with a tiny PC market share.
Its just a pc at the end of the day, the hardware isnt anything special.
Its mostly a image thing, as the 2 post above prove.
The quality of the build is far greater, rather than using cheaply moulded plastic like my cheap Lenovo, it's a really solid block of aluminium.
But sure at the end of the day it's more durable, longer battery life and looks better, is that worth twice what I paid for my Lenovo? Evidently I didn't think so but I would have paid £100 more.
This is true. Anyone who's ever tried to build a Hackintosh can tell you straight just how unreliable OSX is when installed o anything other than the select hardware Apple has approved. Ever heard of a kernel panic? That's OSX's equivalent to a BSOD - and its far more prevalent on OSX than Windows if you start mixing and matching hardware.
The simple fact is, OSX gets away with certain advantages due to its locked-down nature. Even then its not perfect. I've seen enough problems on Macs to know they don't "just work" like advertised. But if OSX were to be pushed out en masse, it would inevitably have to end up on a myriad of hardware configurations.
One, Apple don't offer enough options for all usage scenarios and two, if they ever got such a market share, they'd be hit with an antitrust suit and be forced into licensing the OS to third parties. Once that happened, it would soon be discovered that OSX is not actually superior to Windows.
There's an advantage in having a small market share and a tightly-controlled platform that would be lost if the operating system ever achieved mass market penetration.
Ah but it's shiny and has an Apple logo on the back Plus it looks great in Starbucks and even better if the user has a smug face while they're using it