Hi there.  We use both Mac & PC and have for many years. There had been some 
reticence from our IT crew in the past to support our Macs (cue: Roll of eyes 
when speaking of the Mac user!) but this reaction is thankfully now becoming a 
thing of the past as it becomes more understood that graphics professionals 
prefer to use Macintosh.

I'm inclined to "trust the driver" rather than "trust the mechanic"-- an 
opposing view from many an IT professional perhaps (but with the OS Macs crash 
less than PC's if that is any consolation). Ultimately I'd rather trust the one 
who is going to be driving the machine the majority of the time, rather than 
someone who might have to configure it or fix it at some point for whatever 
reason-- a scenario that is less common these days anyway. If you're talking 
about graphics and comfort/usability for your creative professionals, trust 
what they prefer-- even if it seems like a silly preference. You will be 
rewarded in the end with the ease of use, and yes, the better looking 
interface. It does make a difference-- and may show itself in productivity. The 
old adage:  A happy worker equals more work produced! Afterall, we ARE talking 
art, design and high-end photography here. My vote:  If they have a preference 
for Macintosh, trust their experience and follow it.

P.S.- For PC users who for whatever reason want to have the PC look or 
experience on a Macintosh platform, there is a program called "Parallels" that 
emulates the PC environment on a Mac. But my sense is that once they hop on a 
Mac and see how easy it is comparitively, they won't wanna go back!


Don Ross
Digital Imaging Specialist
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
dross at sfmoma.org
415/ 357-4167


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] on behalf of David Marsh
Sent: Fri 9/8/2006 3:33 PM
To: 'Museum Computer Network Listserv'
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Tricky question - is Mac "better" than PC?
 
>From a tech support point of view:

1) I agree with those who have stated the position that there is little
difference in performance potential.

2) As a hardware nut, I personally suspect that a powerhouse PC could be
built with better price/performance ratio than a MAC. Commodity
economics. I wonder how many PCs are built for each MAC (10:1, 100:1 or
more?)

3) Utility software:
There is very little (if any) utility software that isn't available for
PC. 
Availability for MAC is far more patchy. 
I use a bunch of highly useful and powerful tools like Symantec Ghost,
Anti-Virus, file management any many other obscure and handy tools that
are often not available for MAC.

4) PCs integrate easily into my PC support systems (AV, backup etc.)
MACs require extra effort, resources and tools to accommodate.

5) Regardless of merit, having 2 classes of computer rather than 1
creates extra support workload, regardless of which may be better. VHS
is technically inferior to Betamax, and certainly Philips 2000 (ever
heard of that?) yet nobody would ever advocate adopting either of the
latter pair.

6) While many techs respect MACs, I've never yet met a tech who actually
advocated for them. Think about that. Frankly, the individuals I've
encountered who most vociferously advocate for them generally have
little technical background. As a techie I therefore find it hard to
find their positions compelling. If I want advice on a well-engineered
car I'm more likely to listen to a mechanic than a taxi driver.

Let's be clear: I'm not anti-MAC. I'm just not pro-MAC, and I've not
been convinced yet by anybody who is.

David M

===========================================
David Marsh
System Administrator
H.R. MacMillan Space Centre 
Vancouver Museum
1100 Chestnut Street, Vancouver, BC V6J 3J9 
E sysadmin at hrmacmillanspacecentre.com
    sysadmin at vanmuseum.bc.ca
T (604) 736 4431 ext. 5507
C (604) 813 9667 
===========================================

-----Original Message-----
From: mcn-l-bounces at mcn.edu [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
Randy Heise
Sent: Friday, September 08, 2006 12:17 PM
To: 'Museum Computer Network Listserv'
Subject: Re: [MCN-L] Tricky question - is Mac "better" than PC?

With the latest operating systems both machines co-exist on the network
very
well. We have Macs in the Graphics, Exhibit design and Multi-media
departments. Cost is equal. It would it would initially appear that the
Mac
is more expensive, but by the time you've spent the money on a PC to
make it
an equivelent performer you could buy a Mac for the same amount. As far
as
the Administration portions of the Museum ... PC's are far superior
simply
because the majority of Museum specific software available is written
for a
PC. It becomes not a question of the machine itself but of the useage
that
dictates which is best for what job. My advice would be 'apply the best
tool
to the job at hand' and don't be afraid to mix when necessary. Our Macs
log
on to an MS Exchange server for e-mail, share calendar functions with
the
PCs, store data on Win2K3 servers, print to windows printers and behave
on
the network like any other workstation. I would not waste the power of a
Mac
for writing word documents nor performing accounting functions. I would
also
not waste the time required to make the average PC perform as well as a
Mac
in graphics oriented duties. Just my .02 typed on a PC while my G4
mactop is
beside it monitoring traffic flow on my Win2K3 Network.  

Randy Heise
Information Technology Manager
High Desert Museum
59800 South Hwy 97
Bend, OR  97702
541.382.4754 x244
rheise at highdesertmuseum.org
www.highdesertmuseum.org



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