x2I think the trackpad on the new Macbook Pros is worth the £150 alone compared to any other laptop.
x2I think the trackpad on the new Macbook Pros is worth the £150 alone compared to any other laptop.
Windows 7 seems to have had a fairly problem free first couple of months, with Snow Leopard having an uncharacteristic wobble.

I didn't use Windows 7 for too long before I got my Macbook, but what part of the UI was borrowed from OS X?
I'm not saying Microsoft haven't borrowed/stole/been inspired by anything in OS X, but as Arachnae said they all borrow and steal from each other and that's how it should be.
And that's fine, but it'd be nice if Microsoft showed any signs of innovation. As I've said, they're obviously capable of it looking at office 2007 and the latest exchange/sql version but what is there in Windows 7? Vista had a few bits but nothing stand out...
What happened to WinFS? - that would have been a real step forwards and it's been missing in action for years now...
Not everything apple do is original sure, but spotlight was brilliant when it first turned up and I disagree about time machine, it's the first real consumer targeted backup solution built into an OS. I've no issue with people borrowing the idea, the competition fuels innovation further, but I just see very little coming from microsoft on the consumer OS front...

Of course it's taking it to the extreme but that's what is going to be possible in a few years time. It's up and running on the iPhone so there's no reason it can't run on a Notebook running Chrome OS.
5Mbps will be the highest quality settings they won't save bandwidth buy cutting the quality of the graphics. They'll only be able to do that by reducing the resolution sent to the end user. 5Mbps isn't that far away and 720p is HD (360 games are rendered at 720p and some are even 480p) and maybe it will be cheaper to buy a 360 but the price point of OnLive doesn't change Chrome OS.
And it's revolutionary compared to a virtual server because of how you connect to a virtual server. At the moment you need an OS installed, then you need to install software usually to connect to the server. All that is going to take loner to boot and drain the battery a lot quicker than a web browser that boots in 7 seconds on an EEE PC. I don't think you can boot Windows 7, run the software and connect to a virtual server in 7 seconds on an EEE PC.
ROFL at 5mbps,
the cable between your graphics card and monitor runs at Gbps mate. So yer the image is going to laughably compressed and poor quality .
I can't see this happening for a long time
sid
The Alienware is in no way equivalent to the MBP. It's 1.5kg heavier and twice the thickness.
) to, basically, make you pay more. Their profit margins are HUGE. I can't really fault Apple for doing this as they are a company not your best friend. But Apple consumers really need to be more sensible and not like this stereotypical but fairly accurate viewpoint of them.
...if apple are to cater to the masses then they must support more machines and will probably have to support a wider range of hardware, I think this might become a weakpoint where mac has been traditionally strong.