General Zod wrote:Stark wrote:I can only tentatively agree with that, as I've never seriously looked at desktop Macs. Macbooks are similar to half-decent Windows laptops (at least in AU), but there is nothing under the AU$1600 lowend model to compare with the shit end of the laptop market.
However, for many people, it's worth a few extra hundred bucks for a system that won't have them on the phone to tech support every time they want to do something. I have zero interest in a PC laptop (particularly the AU$5000 highend huge 'gaming' ones) and Macbooks do everything I want in a small, easy to use package.
Out of interest, what 'feature flexibility' don't Mac laptops have? They've got almost everything standard, and you can add RAM/HDD/etc.
Mainly having the option of more components for less cost. Many sub-$1k pc notebooks offer dual layer dvd burners, for example. But good luck finding anything more than a cd-rw on a mac laptop for their low end costs. As far as having to phone tech support? I suppose that's applicable if you're not very computer savvy, but for someone like me whose been using PCs for years, Mac environments are pretty foreign and making adjustments to personalize your computers is standard, simple stuff.
I can understand that...a lady at CompUSA the other day almost bought a Mac, but she wanted something with the specs of the cheapest MacBook (or lower) but the screen of the MacBook Pro (17") and there were no options from Apple.
Costwise, the laptop I have right now only ran me $750. With the components I got a 2ghz Turion 64 processor, dual layer dvd burner, 80gbhdd, and 512mb of ram. If I wanted anything even remotely similar with a Mac I'd have to shell out at least twice as much.
That's a bit of an exagguration. The $1299 MacBook has a 2 GHz Core 2 Duo (two instead of one, plus faster per clock), same size hard drive, same DVD burner, plus double the memory and a camera and motion sensor and I'd assume better battery life and thinner and lighter.
Still, I understand the gripe about nothing being under $1099. If I could have, I would take the $1099 MacBook + a DVD burner (as I don't care about the difference between a 1.83 and 2 GHz processor).