Soldato
- Joined
- 29 Sep 2003
- Posts
- 5,834
- Location
- Newcastle upon Tyne
I think you are talking about perception again though, at that price point plenty of other laptops share the same build quality, especially since the latest generation of MBP, I find those very plasticy, the original aluminium MBP (manufactured by ASUS iirc) was sturdy but now? As to the track pad, I haven't used a track pad, except in cases of desperation, for years, so I'm sure it is the best in the world, again it's a question of taste as to it's superiority. Screen? Quite a few IPS screens these days, and if like me you don't like shiny screens? I can't give you a technical reason why matt is better than gloss, it's just a question of taste, IPS is better than TN, sure, but it isn't apple specific.
It's about taste, and I will happily agree that for you a Mac is better.
I like the Air, but I'd still buy an Asus ZEN if I needed that kind of machine, because I use windows and without OSX a mac makes no financial or technical sense.
If Apple ever release a workstation that can compete on price, or for me, more importantly performance I'll buy it, hell I'll buy two, but right now I'd have to be insane, or just really really like Apple.
We could argue this all day, and as I'm trying to get enough posts for the MM, I happily will! But I've had this same conversation with studio heads, designers, editors and apple sales guys for going on 20 years now and I have yet to see anything to convince me that apple have anything over a different brand of PC unless you buy into their software, and since it doesn't do what I need, I can't.
There's obviously more to it than just the software. The MBP experience would be very different if it didn't have the trackpad that it has, or the battery life that it does, or the build quality that it has. If it just had a bog standard Synaptics trackpad with poor to moderate battery life and a plasticky, panel based body, it would just be a Windows laptop with a different OS. I'd argue at that point it wasn't worth paying any extra for. But as it offers more than just a different OS, there is obviously more to the value proposition than just the OS. I researched extensively before I bought my late 2010 13" MBP and I couldn't find any alternative laptop that had the same specs, just as good a trackpad, keyboard and build quality in as slim a shell with as good battery life as the machine I bought. The nearest I could get was an HP Envy which had about the same spec, but worse battery life and trackpad and was more expensive. The MBP was the technically superior machine.
Last edited: