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Mac Users On Thai Visa


JimmyTheMook

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Everything he said ^^^

PLUS

More expensive, less software to run on the native machine (without CPU hungry emulators).

Locked into apple upgrades, blah blah blah.

NONE of the software I use on a regular basis runs on a Mac otherwise I'd have one.

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NONE of the software I use on a regular basis runs on a Mac otherwise I'd have one.

What, dont you use Microsoft office on a regular basis? :o

As Macs now use intel processors you can run OSX side by side with XP or Vista if you ever had a need to (no emulators any more). Two systems for the price of one :D

If you ARE thinking of buying then wait a few weeks as OX 10.5 will be released.

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Macs and the operating systems to me are more solid. Macs are so user friendly.

My old G4 ibook only crashed twice in two years - and that was because I was using high end music software, which strained the system. I even dropped it from about 5 feet onto a concrete floor and it only got a scratch, worked fine.

My new Macbook Pro hasn't stalled or crashes once since I got it.

and... like has has been said - no spyware/virus problems etc

Try and buy from the shop on Sukhumvit 55, sub soi 13 - they seem to know what they are doing, and have good after service.

You can get plenty of software form all the usual outlets :o

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Everything he said ^^^

PLUS

More expensive, less software to run on the native machine (without CPU hungry emulators).

Locked into apple upgrades, blah blah blah.

NONE of the software I use on a regular basis runs on a Mac otherwise I'd have one.

No its not an emulator at all. It runs the guest OS right off a special section of the Intel chip for Virtualization. It does reduce performance enough that a gamer who is maxing the machine would notice but for most applications its really hard to detect. I used to boot into Native XP to compare but its hardly worth the trouble. Just run the windows app(s) in a window with Parallels.

You can go to Intels website and read about it... Some people run Mac OS on a Windows box etc. Definitely a lot of Linux folks use virtualization also. Quite a growing trend.

Apple is not for everyone though. Its just 5% or so of the market and Unix under the hood. I like my MacBook Pro. On average I seem to reboot it every 2 weeks or so for software upgrades. Otherwise I have had it going for 45 days without having to reboot. I just close the lid and it suspends. I love mine.

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NONE of the software I use on a regular basis runs on a Mac otherwise I'd have one.

What, dont you use Microsoft office on a regular basis? :o

As Macs now use intel processors you can run OSX side by side with XP or Vista if you ever had a need to (no emulators any more). Two systems for the price of one :D

If you ARE thinking of buying then wait a few weeks as OX 10.5 will be released.

Isn't Word the best-selling WP for Macs? (OK, I haven't checked, but I have this -- possibly erroneous -- ''factoid'' in the back of my mind. Er ... ditto Office).

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Basicly you have two choices;

Run Windows and Mac as a dual boot setup using Bootcamp. This will give you system performance that is the same as if Windows was running on a Windows machine.

or

Run Windows within OSX using Parallels. In Virtual machine setups like this you run Windows within a window in the host system, but you need to have enough memory to run two operating systems at once. 2gb at least for half decent performance.

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Ok, Ok, I admit that I use MS Office :D

Unfortunately all the other stuff (particularly related to revenue collection systems) requires Windoze or worse DOS and much of it talks directly to the PC port hardware :o

I've not tried a recent Mac with windows, last time was 4 or 5 years ago, 'twas carp then :D

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I've not tried a recent Mac with windows, last time was 4 or 5 years ago, 'twas carp then :o

Oh, well - much has changed since then; ever since the Intel processors, Windows runs with near-native speed inside Parallels. Or boot camp of course which transforms you Mac into a very speedy Windows machine.

I would get as much RAM as possible, ideally 3GB - 2GB for OS X and 1GB for Win XP inside Parallels. Seems to be hard to get a hold of high capacity RAM in Thailand so you'd probably have to get the 2GB stick from back home.

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