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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 7:14 am
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 7:26 am
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PC's don't always lag as much. Just depends on how many resources your computer has to allocate to certain programs. My computer NEVER lags unless I'm on WoW while downloading something, or a game that's very graphic intensive while I have a bunch of other things running.
Also, Macs don't have better graphics, just a more clear display, which you can get a new monitor for your PC with that. What it comes down to with graphics is which graphics CARD you have. Yes though, overall, Macs are BETTER with Media editing, but you can do it almost as easily on PC, that's all I'm saying.
One last thing, when I say build a PC, I mean get the parts, put it together yourself, and overclock it if you so choose. Macs idea of building your own is telling them what you want in it, and they do it for you, if I'm not mistaken that is...
Either way, as you said. Some people prefer Macs, some PCs.
Personally, I dual boot my PC. Most of the hard drive is given to windows, but about 20 - 30 gigs is given to a Linux partition in case I wish to code something, or do something along those lines.
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 7:29 am
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 7:38 am
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Well, you probably have a lot of things set to start at boot. That's as easy as:
Start > Run > MsConfig > Start up > (Un-check things you don't want to boot at startup ) > Apply > Restart ( or just exit without restart if you wish, it's up to you. ) It does help to have someone who knows computers to do that, as some of the things in that list are NEEDED at start up. Don't go unchecking anything or your computer may not boot correctly, or at all.
That will make it run a bit faster on start up, THEN you could always Uninstall some things, clear up some space, and make sure the computer is healthy and threat / Spyware / Adware / Malware free and it will run even smoother. Though, depending on the OS on the computer, and it's internals it may be able to be helped only to a point.
If a computer is wired wrong though, there's a chance that it won't be starting up at all, or if it did, it'd have fried out FAST. You probably just have something leeching on your resources somewhere, or bogging it down ( like unwanted programs or something ) which, as I stated before, can be fixed by removing them from the start up queue, or just uninstalling certain things.
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 8:08 am
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 8:42 am
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 8:56 am
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Posted: Wed Dec 10, 2008 12:04 pm
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It's a bit more complicated than that (the whole Mac versus PC argument when it comes to media/DTP) but it's not that much more complicated. The long story short is the operating system has much better support for various colour spaces, colour calibration tools, the Adobe Products function better in OS X (this is opinionated, but it really is easier to use since the arrangement makes more sense on OS X), and the Cinema line of Mac monitors display colours more brilliantly. In addition, the Quartz technologies (ColorSync/Core Audio/Core Video/Core Animation/Core Image/etc.), is a lot more general-purpose than DirectX (which seems to be focused more on gaming) and allows OS X systems to be more versatile when it comes to graphical applications (i.e. seeing filters/plugins on-the-fly, a higher-level object-oriented language to manipulate textures, etc.). In addition, because the operating system uses Display PostScript (essentially, the screen functions as one big interactive PDF) what one sees on the screen can, theoretically, after some adjusting for print, will be what one sees exactly in print.
Long story short, yes one could make PC hardware cheaper than Apple hardware. But it's what's under the hood that makes OS X a (slightly) better product for media production and graphics design. I'm saddened, however, that no retail games have taken advantage of the multimedia APIs that OS X provides by default. Granted, OpenGL isn't bad, but Quartz is pretty amazing.
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