Category: Apple


"Mac or PC" – Oh Really?

I get asked this question by so many people that I’m tired of having to repeat myself all the time. It’s commonly phrased something like, “What’s the difference between Mac and PC?” or “How do you compare the two operating systems?” Well, the answer is quite simple.

You can’t.mac vs pc funny

Why can’t you compare the two? Well, because the Macintosh and Windows operating systems are fundamentally different, going deep down into the roots of Apple and Microsoft’s software practices. And what is this difference of which I speak? It’s the hardware-software relationship.

Basically, the hardware-software relationship dictates how software works with hardware, i.e. which hardware an operating system runs on. As we know, Macintosh is built to only run on Apple hardware, while Windows was developed to be able to run on as diverse environments as possible. Therefore, we simply cannot compare the two operating systems, because their overall environments are drastically different. You might disagree in that it is possible to compare UI elements – well, of course you can compare how certain parts of the interface are implemented and argue that one operating system is better than the other, and this will go on forever, but here, I wish to find the fundamental difference between the systems – what is the main underlying difference between the Macintosh and Windows operating systems? That’s why the hardware-software relationship is so important.

Now, let’s take the diversity we just identified and expand upon it a little bit to form a general view of the two sides. Let’s start with Mac, again. If we know that the OS was built to run on only Apple hardware, what does this mean? Well, it means that Apple put the kibosh on third-parties. By that, I mean that they aren’t willing to accept third-party technologies in the general development and function of their OS. Just as their hardware is limited, so are drivers – the number of devices manufactured by other companies that connect to computers through USB or other popular protocols is very small, in comparison to Windows. This just shows that Apple’s goal is not to create a system that others can contribute to, in the way that Windows runs. Really, how many times have you tried connecting a peripheral to a machine running Windows and drivers weren’t built in or available on an accompanying disk? My bet: very few.

Naturally, one could go on to assume that Apple is, in a way, monopolizing users of their operating system by creating such a bond between hardware and software. However, I do not want people to think that this article is biased – yes, I despise Mac (Windows & Linux FTW!), but I don’t want that to get in the way of our little analysis (I could write a lot about why I greatly prefer Windows over Mac, but that’s another story).

As you can see, Macintosh and Windows are very different, but the most important difference is their fundamental standpoint, expressed in the hardware-software relationship. Without these being equivalent, we just cannot compare one operating system to another.

I was surfing around on SuperUser today, and found a mention to a tool from Apple that I hadn’t heard of before. It’s called the iPhone Configuration Utility, which allows you to examine logs from your iPhone or iPod Touch, to apply configuration and provisioning profiles, and more. The tool is very interesting! [Download: Windows|Mac]

The anti-trust community is all over Google, these days, says an article in the August 2009 issue of Wired Magazine. Fred Vogelstein tells readers that the search giant is the new Microsoft – remember that huge antitrust lawsuit against Microsoft for packaging their browser with Windows? Now they’re interested in the advertising and business ideas of Google, as Google has a huge market share in the advertising and search market, which gives them an enormous amount of data about users. After all, why do they give their excellent software away for free? This is because the more users that their applications have, the more data they have about them, about their interests, their personal identity, and much much more. Effectively, many companies have access to such huge amounts of personal info – take Facebook for example, which acquired FriendFeed yesterday. They can (and do, for all I know) use all the data that users submit about their interests, identity, preferences, and more, to target advertisements, to circumvent identities (in malicious situations), to sell the data to marketing agencies, and more. Or look at Twitter. Look at how much detail Twitter has, even though mostly all of it is accessible by anyone (except of course for preferences, Direct Messages, and protected updates). I rather like Twitter, but what if they (or someone else, possibly someone who scrapes personal info off of their site) use it to create a whole “profile” of a person’s characteristics, personality, hobbies, interests, and whatnot? I know that Twitter won’t do this, but some other company in such a situation might. Like Apple.

Apple is the one the antitrust community should be gunning for. Look at how they are monopolizing.A classic example is the iPhone, exclusive to AT&T. Why is this, you might ask? This way, they can pull even more money out of the pocket’s of their users. Also, what is the whole point of all the restrictions inside the iPhone OS? Why can’t Apple be open, like Google with Android, open-sourced and partially developed by the community from the start? The Macintosh, Apple’s key product, is also an example of this. Mac OS X is only compatible with Apple hardware, not anything else, so that everything has to be through Apple, hardware and software, meaning more money for Apple, as well as an unnecessary monopoly, while Windows is completely open to all suitable hardware, because Microsoft isn’t a hardware manufacturer and knows not to lock people in, though they did that with IE some time ago (and possibly even again now). Apple even makes it hard for you to change the battery in a laptop!!! They want you to stop from using devices from others that compete with them!

And yet we agree to such a tradeoff. We still give all our information to Apple, ranging from our music purchases in iTunes (musical preferences and interests), files in MobileMe, email, pictures, computer preferences, and so much more. But they are crossing the line – why don’t they understand that doing so is dangerous? However, no one seems to care that Apple is being so monopolizing to users, even though in some of its main conquests it has a small market share. Look, this will end bad for you, Apple, so make the situation better for users NOW and save yourselves of the future consequences of not doing so. Otherwise, what is the commercial world coming to?

Copyright © 2010 Maxim Zaslavsky. All Rights Reserved.

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