On 01/20/2016 08:58 AM, Ethan wrote:
We also had Macs at the time and they were clearly better. I could never really understand why people were using Windows at the time. Our Macs were the color Macs and were very expensive (I'm betting that was it) but they were reliable and the environment was completely consistent. The Mac applications generally shared the exact same key and mouse strokes so learning a new application was a breeze and the mouse and the keyboard compliment each other. On Windows, trying to use the mouse and keyboard in a consistent manner was impossible.
It was all about DOS, and having actual software to run. The Macs had good desktop publishing, but calling BBSes on them wouldn't be good (full screen full color Ansi with the real PC character set!) By the i386, you had rocking sound cards, tons of games, tons of shareware freeware and a huge underground. PC had so much more software just a lot of it on the DOS side. High resolution of the Mac rocked but Mac OS 1 to 9 .. File forks? I copied a file onto one from a PC that eas a SeaArc or SIT and the Alladin systems unarchiver can't see the file and... yea Mac OS was horrible.
Ah, yes, I do recall that. I was fortunate not to have owned a PC until Linux was nearing 0.91. I had Windows for about a week (I used it at work alot). I then loaded Linux on the machine. I still have the machine in front of me (AT&T 6386SX/EL WGS). My previous machine was a 3B1. While I didn't own a PC, I built tons of them for other folks. I guess I was a Unix snob. Once Linux arrived I was still trying to figure out why folks wanted to use Windows. ;-) -- Linux Home Automation Neil Cherry ncherry@linuxha.com http://www.linuxha.com/ Main site http://linuxha.blogspot.com/ My HA Blog Author of: Linux Smart Homes For Dummies