fjdouse said:
Christ! It ain't difficult to understand is it?
It's a PC if it's a PC. ie. PC processor. PC hardware. PC compatible. You know? PC?
Well, I think the confusion (mine and others') stems from the fact that we're going on different definitions of "PC". To me, what makes a "Mac" different from a "PC" is the OS it runs, not the OSes it is
capable of running. My Mac
can run Linux, but it doesn't, so that doesn't make it any less of a Mac. Hardware is only a factor to me in the sense that Apple has a unique design philosophy in the computer world. Neither the OS nor Apple's design philosophy is bound to change much, if at all.
Again, I'd call an Apple machine running Linux or BeOS a PC, not a Mac. And I've always considered non-Apple computers running the Mac OS to be just as much Macs as Apple's computers. I remember that Apple used to ship Macs that actually COULD run Windows natively, through a PC Compatibility card. They were still Macs.
I'm trying to understand here (and I apologize for my earlier comments; I really didn't get your point, and I'm not sure I even do now). I can't see how you feel the LACK of compatibility with Windows (all else being equal) can be a good thing. It (presumably) wouldn't change the hardware, or its ability to run OS X, in any way. It's just an EXTRA feature. How can this make it worse?
If your problem is with the move to Intel, and you just feel it's an inferior architecture, then I can understand that; heck, I even agree I
still haven't heard any really convincing arguments that the G5 is in worse shape than the Pentium 4 (IINM, Intel has increased their clock speeds LESS in the past two years than IBM has!). But, since they
are moving to Intel, what is there to gain by NOT supporting other OSes? I just don't see how extra OS support makes it any less of a Mac when it's running the Mac OS. To me, it seems like the best of both worlds.
This is, of course, operating under the assumption that the hardware will be the same either way, as Phil Schiller sort of implied. IF Apple is faced with the choice between supporting/enabling Windows to run on their machines and making their machines run the Mac OS better (say, with extra hardware components that simply don't support Windows), then certainly, I think Apple should forget about Windows support altogether. But if there are no such barriers to Windows support...well, why not?
fjdouse said:
Yep, fair enough, but Macs and Apple users (until they became hypocrites) prided themselves that Macs are NOT lowly PC compatibles.
Not me. I've been using Macs since long before the PPC, and I was never proud of a
lack of compatibility. I don't use Macs because I want a machine that CAN'T run Windows; I use Macs because I want a machine that CAN run the Mac OS. It's the Mac compatibility that makes it what it is, not the Windows INcompatibility.