AdmiralAK said:
Plus this is finally a good oppotrunity for straight comparisons between macs and PC and finally put people in their places
I agree. With this transition, the majority of the BS reasons why windoze users bash Macs are done away with. Especially if Apple uses the same exact hardware.
I only have two "concerns" about the transition. The first, which I'm not all that worried about, is that lack of 64 bit processing in the Intel world.
I'm not all that concerned about this, because this is how I see the transition working (pure speculation). Apple will release Intel based Powerbooks (and maybe iBooks) while the PowerMacs will remain on the PPC (probably for the first year or so). After which the Intel 64 bit processors will be more widely adopted by the market and the PowerMacs will transition to those processors.
My thinking on this stems from the universal binary idea. If Apple was basically going to just dump the PPC, then why go to all the effort to get developers to support both platforms? Why not let the developers basically say "If you're using a PPC you'll need to use version x. But if you have the new Intel you can get version y"?
My second "concern" is only a bit (and I mean very small insignificant bit) worrisome: how is Apple going to keep OS X associate with their hardware, and what are they going to do if they fail?
With all of the jerk offs out there that are like "I'd use OS X if Apple would release it for the PC", you know there are going to be a group of wannabe hackers (and maybe even some real h4><0rs) out there that will be trying to break whatever method Apple comes up with to lock OS X to their hardware. So, in the snowball's chance that they finally succeed what will Apple do?
Well, my $0.02 are up ... so I'll leave it at that.