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Ahh, a delusional machead, who thinks the almighty Jobs will protect your make forever.No they aren't.
Don't fall for the FUD.
I find Zune to be a more pleasurable experience than iPod's. And I have used iPod's for a long time.I am not impressed by Apple. I have had 4 ipods and they just weren't innovative enough, given how populaur they are and how much money apple could spend in development of them.
One virus is enough. You can laugh and say how many viruses Windows XP and below have, but it doesn't matter, Mac has a successful virus that is a real threat.Ha ha ha. One virus and you'd throw a party?
A successful virus might be less likely now than ever. If MS claims to have the problem aced — after 20 years — why wouldn't Apple that last was attacked when System 8 was current?
Exclusive Windows users are too used to them. For many, it's inconceivable there shouldn't be any at all. For Mac users, especially those who've always used Macs, it's simply business as usual, no big deal.
You guys pin all your hopes on a single virus, continually forgetting that even if it came to pass, it would still be only one virus, a situation little different than the grand total of 54 that claim to have attacked pre-OS X systems, even before the net. There would have to be more than 100,000 viruses for Mac before the scale even begins to balance.
If all those plain-vanilla Windows users pray for one single Mac virus because Mac users deserve their cummupance, think of the virus writers who pray to create the first. That virus writer would be famous, and probably get rich quick because of it.
Well, it's been eight years. *Shrug*
Forgive me, the Safari problems are vulnerabilities, but in some cases, the vulnerabilities were worse than viruses.I might be wrong, but I think it was Apple's Newton that was hit by the very first virus.
Safari has had more than a couple of holes plugged. But those holes represented potential security-attack weaknesses, not virus weaknesses.
An attack, a potential attack, a vulnerability or potential vulnerability isn't a virus, a point avoided by the anti-Mac press. It confuses all of these, on purpose. You may notice this as obvious now, the next time you read an article warning of the next OS X vulnerability. (Apple, by the way, has never said it is invulnerable to attack or viruses. What Apple does is plugs any hole very, very quickly with free software updates.)
By definition, a virus replicates itself from machine to machine. That's very unlikely to occur on the Mac platform because of its Unix underpinnings as well as the safeguards added to its flavour of Unix with OS X.
A virus spreading from Mac to Mac was very difficult pre-OS X, as well. The only virus that had any measure of success was included in a software CD distributed by a Mac mag. But even it fizzled because any Mac on a network or on the net needed (and still needs, but with OS X, moreso) user intervention to allow any app to install.
Windows' biggest hole is the registry that granted permission for apps, including viruses, to install unbeknownst to the user. The Mac, whether running OS X or a pre-OS-X system, never had registries.
With Vista, MS plugged that hole with interventionist popups (and whatever else) so now Windows viruses will be as scarce as hens' teeth.
I think the salad days for viruses, on either platform, have come and gone.
Those PC vs. Mac ads are propaganda films. The information they give on Vista is outdated, or just plain not true. Yet, no one calls them on the fact, or even cares. It is really sad seeing those ads, because it is all lies now.I didn't know it took that long for Apple to fix Safari. I didn't pay much attention, I guess, because I don't like or use Safari. Nor do I use Apple's Mail.
I figure that those are the first apps that would be employed to make use of any vulnerability. And I also don't like Mail because there is no way to turn off HTML, possibly another way for the bad guys to profit. So I use Mozilla's stuff. It's tons better, even without using extensions (which I do).
Apple's TV ad with John Hodgeman as the ''sick'' PC didn't state Macs couldn't catch a virus. But the odds against it are enough to imply it.
Vista, though, killed that ad.
I hadn't heard of pre-X OSes having kernel panics; I suppose it could be used as just another term for crash. And if it isn't, it's the same result.
I never had much problem with crashes, though I've read how creaky OS 9 had become. I'm posting this using 9, and it's been running for hours. But OS 9 is heavy-maintenance compared to OS X (and unlike X, 9 needs Norton and/or Disk Warrior to keep it afloat). X needs nothing but its built-in utilities.
I think the salad days for viruses, on either platform, have come and gone.
Microsoft supports all it's OS's for about 7 years after they kill it.I think software companies are about the only businesses that can get away with selling something that is faulty, customers just seem to accept it and spend however much time it takes to download the fixes and the fixes of fixes. I can understand Linux users putting up with it as the software is free, to a lesser extent I can understand Mac users though the fixes seem to be less and the OS is also very cheap in comparison to Vista. When windows users revolt perhaps MS will sit up and listen. They do seem to have done this to a certain extent by continuing to support XP until they have a replacement for Vista. They would never have backtracked on this if the take up of Vista was what it was intended to be.
In my work I visit loads of offices and I haven't noticed one that is running Vista.
I find Vista better than the competitors. I don't know how setup for it is though. I am a firm believer that you don't actually buy Vista, you buy a computer with Vista on it.I shouldn't have said "support" I should have said "sell" they back tracked and are now going to continue to Sell XP on low spec machines until there is a replacement for Vista. I believe that PC world now offers a free "downgrade" to XP from Vista.
BTW my ex has set up a few new users on Vista and says it is a pain in the arse compared to 98 or XP.
Whispers what is FUD or RDF?
Hmmm, seems they are going to use the Mac hardware. Doesn't necessarily mean they are going to use OS X.German publisher drops 12,000 PCs for Mac
see
http://www.appleinsider.com/articles/08/07/04/german_publisher_drops_12000_pcs_for_mac_more.html
Do I hear 9% in 2009?
No matter what you run, It is good that Gates & Co. are losing their domination of the OS market. Their should be lots of room for OSX and various distros of Linux. May the poorest of the breed die off.![]()
Nooo, I mean how long before they start using Vista or XP more heavily than OS X for day to day business functions.Why would it take months to load and set up XP or Vista on the machines?
Macs run OS X, XP, Vista and Linux, natively. Partition the drive into four and all of them could be in one machine.
I heard Snow Leopard is suppose to be more business oriented, idk about that though.They're using Windows now, I'd imagine, so there's probably no change.That's a myth that's slowly disappearing. I ran a search for ''OS X'' ''business applications'', and this story topped the list, so I include the link here. I didn't bother looking at the others, so there likely are better ones.It comes with Boot Camp. But that's a pain because the machine must be rebooted. Parallels and another, open-source app, the name of which I can't recall, run Windows — in a window — on the OS X desktop. So no rebooting required.
I think the cost of buying a dozen PC's is less than the cost of buying a dozen Macs. I mean, businesses don't need powerful machines unless they are doing graphics, and MS does have business volume licenses for their stuff.I think it's politics between that company and MS, which is losing tons of companies because of its licensing greed. The cost of its licences is blowing up in their faces.
Apple isn't reaping much of the whirlwind, however. Most of the companies — and even countries — telling MS to get stuffed are switching to Linux, I think.








