The print industry's slowness in upgrading to MacOS X has little to do with trust and nearly everything to do with the fact that mission critical hardware and software may not be supported under the new OS. I'm not in the print industry, but I have similar considerations. With the release of the G5, however, I made the plunge. The situation on the other side is quite different. There are a lot of people over there who are paid lots of money to make that stuff work. Those highly paid IT people don't trust M$. It is standard practice over there to be at least one generation and maybe two generations behind M$'s latest release. The problem has become serious enought that M$ went out and bought Connectix's emulation products. M$ hopes that it can sell Virtual Server as a way to get its customers to buy its new operating systems.Originally posted by uoba
Wish this was true, but their are a huge portion of Mac users who will take a long time to migrate to OSX. Namely, the print industry, and a lot of the graphics industry.
I don't think it's just about people not trusting MS, it's the fact that although better, XP essentially is not far removed in appeal to 95! The massive cost of a MS upgrade doesn't help either (come on, why is the Home edition so much!?)
Anyway, as you say Harvestr, we'll all be riding on OS10.999 or 11 (will Apple ever get past the number 10!?)
Originally posted by voice-
You mention trust, too. Apple doesn't have my trust. Look at the latest example with the 10.2.8 upgrade (first try).
Originally posted by voice-
OS X has the ease of upgrade in that it preserves settings and accounts, it has support in that Apple chooses not to support anything below current version number, thereby forcing users to upgrade. MS is better in this aspect, supporting previous versions as well.
Indeed!We also have to solve a ton of things in terms of simplicity and management.