[AGL] Mac Attack
michele mason
yaya.m at earthlink.net
Sat Mar 10 07:51:10 EST 2007
Strange. I never had any of those problems with a Mac. Its me who
messes up. Maybe its just the personality of the user that makes for
the right fit.? mm
On Mar 6, 2007, at 1:31 PM, Jon Ford wrote:
>
> Gerry-- It's funny, but I went at things the opposite of you and
> arrived at the same place. I started out as a big booster of graphic
> interfaces. I was certain that I could never adjust to the PC world,
> so I bought an Atari computer, then realized that Macs had the same
> kind of interface and better support. Plus they were the computer of
> choice at my wife's workplace, Stanford, so we could get a good deal
> on them and free software.
>
> I started an all Mac computer lab at my own all-PC school, and got
> thoroughly sick of Macs along the way: break-downs, expensiveness,
> compatibility of older macs with newer systems, etc. . Gradually my
> lab switched over to PCs, I bought myself one, and the rest is
> history. I see nothing so great about MAcs-- except maybe immunity to
> visuses, and you can alsways get a subscription to an anti-virus
> program. They are expensive and cute, but I think rather fragile--
> mine were always in the shop, my daughter's is frequently broken, and
> the same goes for the problems of most other people I know who have
> Macs. I can use any computer to do the simple things I do, so I
> wouldn't give a hoot about Auto-cad; however, there are plenty ofother
> reasons to prefer PCs over macs.
>
> Jon
>
>> From: "Gerry" <mesmo at gilanet.com>
>> Reply-To: survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the
>> 60s<austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net>
>> To: "survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the
>> 60s"<austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net>
>> Subject: Re: [AGL] Mac Attack
>> Date: Mon, 5 Mar 2007 16:58:00 -0700
>>
>> Byron,
>> Yeah, you're right. My comment about horses was directed at MM. I too
>> have heard lots of raves about the iMac 24. But my first question is:
>> do it run AutoCAD? And Macs don't. Many years back they made a
>> version for the Mac and it was major dud, hence you will find no Macs
>> at engineering offices and the like. And since AutoCAD is my
>> illustration and desk top publishing tool I don't do Macs.
>>
>> In 1959 I worked at an insurance company home office. Trained in the
>> DP department and eventually (6 months) promoted to assistant
>> manager. In 1961 went to programming school and started writing
>> programs for IBM mainframes, until 1965. This was back before
>> packaged programs were available, every company had programmers who
>> created the software. Then a long break from the world of offices
>> while I pursued the life of a professional musician, skirt chaser,
>> and dope fiend.
>>
>> In 1980, having surfaced from the underground and become gainfully
>> employed once again, I purchased one of the first personal computers,
>> an Osborne. Toted that dog around on airplanes, etc. while I was a
>> union rep. Then an original IBM PC, great machine for the time. In
>> 1985/86 studied computer drafting and technical illustration at TSTI
>> and learned a little AutoCAD. In 1987 went to work as a mobile
>> AutoCAD instructor, toting a dozen or so units (all PC's of course)
>> around Texas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma in a van, setting up classes in
>> rented motel meeting rooms. In 1988 taught at College of Santa Fe,
>> AutoCAD and PageMaker. In 1989 moved to Seattle, working for The
>> Austin Company, a builder of large, hi-tech buildings. My job?
>> AutoCAD supervisor, 30 engineers and designers working AutoCAD. Took
>> a course at U of Washington in PC repair and began long subscription
>> to PC World magazine, was very current for a long time. In 1991/92
>> worked for architectural/civil engineering firm as Computer Manager,
>> mainly AutoCAD but everything else in the office as well. In 1993
>> managed 5th largest AutoCAD training center in the USA, Eastern
>> Washington, Hanford Works, for Gonzaga U. Seattle is a PC town, just
>> as Austin is a Mac town...strong prejudices. AutoCAD on a Mac is sick
>> joke, you never see that combo in the work place. Only Macs I saw in
>> the work place were for architectural renderings, never for drafting
>> or design.
>>
>> Moved to NM in 1993 and started drawing on the PC using AutoCAD.
>> Started arts and crafts business peddling the art work created on PC.
>> Met a few other digital artists in Las Cruces (there were 3 of us in
>> the southern half of NM in those days). The most incredible work was
>> by a woman who uses the sketch tool in Word Perfect as her drawing
>> software, a Philipina with superb talent. Don't know how she does it,
>> but then again, I hear the same kind of comments about my using
>> AutoCAD instead of an illustration program. I have "made" my last two
>> computers, barebones, select the components and assemble them. Not
>> possible with Macs. Quite easy to make one that will run circles
>> around a Mac for about 1/3 the cost. The styling argument leaves me
>> cold. I don't look at the box, it's under the desk.
>>
>> I have used my personal computer to make a living for many years now,
>> long before the internet and modern communications and packaged
>> programs. Always have a laptop and a desktop and various parts and
>> peripherals lying about, also a variety of printers and scanners
>> (large format). But I will admit that in recent years, with my system
>> working like a charm, I have not kept abreast of all the many changes
>> in the world of computers. The late versions of Windows have home
>> theater software too, haven't tried it, don't need it. I did buy
>> another IBM laptop on e-bay last year to replace one that had become
>> dated. Hardly ever use it. My most common source is newegg.com. Check
>> them out sometime and see what all you might get if you build your
>> own and/or need to save cash.
>>
>> Macs have always been the most expensive, low-power machines on the
>> market. I guess if price is no object and the main use is gossiping
>> on the internet and processing photos they are fine. But lots of us
>> do have to consider price and the other performance categories I
>> mentioned in the last post. And, like I said, they still rule in the
>> field of graphic arts, but except for Mac towns you hardly ever see
>> them in offices. (Back in the '80's Apple gave thousands of computers
>> to school systems with the idea that it would pay off in the long
>> run. Austin and the UofT were recipients of this generosity, and from
>> that beginning Austin became a Mac town. Once I made the mistake of
>> taking drawings--on disks--to Austin media shops to get them printed
>> out. Not one shop in town had AutoCAD installed, Mac format only. In
>> Seattle the opposite was true, not a Mac to be seen in the pro shops.
>> So it becomes a case of "dance with the one that brung ya" and for me
>> that is the PC, siempre).
>>
>> I guess there is something about watching a movie on a larger screen
>> that appeals, but in the darkness of my ignorance I am under the
>> impression that my 17" monitor and Walmart sound system is just
>> fine...when it becomes dated I will make another one. I am looking at
>> the new HDTV's as a home movie theater but not too seriously yet. I
>> live in a small house. And I am in the market for computer sound that
>> wires directly into one's hearing aids...
>> G
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: bakhirun bakhirun
>> To: survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s
>> Sent: Monday, March 05, 2007 3:33 PM
>> Subject: [AGL] Mac Attack
>>
>>
>> I am trying to remember the quote from Spanish. It goes something
>> like "...lo que sabe el burro de matematika..." (but it is probably
>> dirtier).
>>
>> I too have a rather long history of rasslin' with personal
>> computers. Artist friends in Montreal first baptized me with a creaky
>> Mac 512 in 1986. I well remember the mental agonies required, at the
>> age of 45, in having to learn to follow every tiny rule and neat
>> keystroke. Then I moved in with an old pal in New York and used her
>> MultiMate, on DOS. When I came to Indonesia and started working as a
>> copywriter I had to use WP5.1 because everybody else was. Bye-bye
>> Maccy at that point.
>>
>> But I am basically a visual expressionist and the lure of the wild
>> has always hovered at the (event) horizon. I took a look at the iMac
>> 24. Jeez, it looks like a home theatre. And all the reviews, even
>> from the non-Mac crowd, are replete with wows.
>>
>> So I'm going for it. As we used to say at the Campus Guild, "Faint
>> heart never screwed the cook."
>>
>> Thankee
>>
>> BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB
>>
>>
>> On 3/6/07, Gerry <mesmo at gilanet.com> wrote:
>> You know about as much about computers as I do about horses...
>> G
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "michele mason" <yaya.m at earthlink.net>
>> To: "survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the 60s"
>> <austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net>
>> Sent: Monday, March 05, 2007 1:45 PM
>> Subject: Re: [AGL] The Baron is either (a) or (b)
>>
>>
>> That's okay. But, not flexibility, or bang for the buckknow
>> where to
>> buy and from whom. Software/hardware, maybe, maybe just a little
>> inferior. One may get used to a corncob, but I prefer Charmin.
>> Yes, a
>> macsnob, but I don't mind. mm
>>
>> On Mar 5, 2007, at 12:24 PM, Gerry wrote:
>>
>> > <<Macs are better in every sense!<<
>> >
>> > Except cost, bang for the buck, flexibility, general
>> availability of a
>> > huge
>> > selection of software and hardware, etc.
>> >
>> > The one and only area that Macs established an early following
>> and
>> > have been
>> > able to keep it is graphic arts...oh yeah, and cuteness...
>> >
>> > Not intending to start a "my computer is better than yours war"
>> but
>> > resisting such an extreme statement as yours.
>> >
>> > On the DOS platform since 1985,
>> > G
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > ----- Original Message -----
>> > From: "michele mason" < yaya.m at earthlink.net>
>> > To: "survivors' reminiscences about Austin Ghetto Daze in the
>> 60s"
>> > <austin-ghetto-list at pairlist.net>
>> > Sent: Monday, March 05, 2007 9:38 AM
>> > Subject: Re: [AGL] The Baron is either (a) or (b)
>> >
>> >
>> >> Macs are better in every sense! That's my story....and you
>> know.
>> >> Sincerely, I am a Mac-person and wouldn't have anything else.
>> Its just
>> >> a matter of which one you need. That ?, I would direct to Dave
>> >> Moriaty.
>> >>
>> >> Best regards, Michele
>> >>
>> >> On Feb 15, 2007, at 5:49 AM, blacky at cbn.net.id wrote:
>> >>
>> >>>
>> >>> I have decided to plunk down two thousand clams for a 24-inch
>> iMac,
>> >>> primarily to use for photo work and video editing.
>> >>>
>> >>>
>> >>> (a) Hooray for you, Byron. Go for it.
>> >>>
>> >>> (b) Yer bonkers, mate.
>> >>>
>> >>> Considering that all the furniture in my house is
>> waterlogged, and
>> >>> that
>> >>> this sum represents a prodigious amount of dough for me, my
>> esteemed
>> >>> colleagues and most valued peers are staring at me like I
>> have lost
>> >>> my
>> >>> fucking mind.
>> >>>
>> >>> Wish me luck folks. Anyhow the way I look at it since I spend
>> 25% of
>> >>> my
>> >>> waking hours staring at a stupid screen it may as well be a
>> >>> whizz-bang
>> >>> one.
>> >>>
>> >>> Any, er, comments? Feedback? Warnings?
>> >>>
>> >>> BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBB
>> >>>
>> >>
>> >>
>> >
>>
>>
>>
>>
>
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