Hi Aaron,
Have you been hanging out with Bill? <vbg.
Paul
 -------------- Original message ----------------------
From: "Aaron Reynolds" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> You two must realize how idiotic this conversation makes both of you look.  
> It's 
> like someone is e-mailing me the worst parts of Usenet.
> 
> -Aaron
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> 
> From:  Godfrey DiGiorgi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Subj:  Re: Life in the Raw
> Date:  Mon May 1, 2006 3:52 pm
> Size:  2K
> To:  [email protected]
> 
> On May 1, 2006, at 12:10 PM, Cory Papenfuss wrote:
> 
> > As long as we're being precise, I'll just clarify that the [Apple]  
> > adjective was missing from my description.  A Macintosh is by  
> > definition an Apple product, but MacOSX doesn't run in an iPod or  
> > Apple II... only on a "Macintosh."
> >
> > Fun game... no really... :)
> 
> Semantically:
> Apple hardware is a generic term. Apple II, iPod, etc are specific  
> products, as is "Macintosh". Apple II, iPod, Macintosh, Macintosh  
> Plus, Power Macintosh G5, etc are all examples of Apple products  
> which fall under the generic term "Apple hardware". Not all Apple  
> hardware is the same, or can run the same operating system.
> 
> No Apple product made since 1986 has been labeled simply "Macintosh".  
> Everything from that point forward was Macintosh Plus, Macintosh SE,  
> Macintosh II, etc etc. Mac OS X (NOT "MacOSX") runs on Apple hardware  
> which generally includes *most* (if not all) of the Apple  general  
> purpose computing hardware with G3 processors and later, if you want  
> to make it more specific.
> 
> So to say that you need to "purchase Macintosh hardware" to run  
> "MacOSX" is technically incorrect on two counts. Although since I  
> understand exactly what you're saying, the distinction is moot. ... ;-)
> 
> > There is no super-fast Mac hardware when it comes to overall system  
> > performance.  Memory bandwidth, chipsets, etc all tend to be a bit  
> > slower than the PC counterparts.  Not counting notebooks, I see a  
> > G5 dual/dual-dual for between $2000-$3300.  Building a PC piece by  
> > piece will get you dual core for $1000 or less.
> 
> Calling a G5 2.7Ghz Quad or an Xserve less than "super fast" is a  
> little absurd to me. But that would drag us down into the horrors of  
> benchmarks and metrics, component performance vs integrated  
> throughput performance, ad nauseam, where I'd rather not waste  
> bandwidth.
> 
> A brand-new PowerMac G5 2Ghz DP with 1G RAM and 250G drive, all the  
> wireless options, keyboard and mouse, operating system and included  
> software (iLife '06), full development system software, cost me  
> $1700. The monitor was extra, as was the second 500G drive and 2G  
> more RAM. Overall, since I'm not a tinkerer, it wasn't a bad price  
> for the performance and quality. I don't know build-it-yourself  
> pricing very well as it's been years since I was interested to build  
> a system from parts, but to buy comparable quality and performance  
> enclosures, motherboards, drives, power supplies, etc etc and add the  
> OS and other software to it, the value proposition is different by  
> only a slim margin.
> 
> My time is also worth something. I like to do photography ... my  
> work ... not tinker with computers. I use computers to do my work,  
> and I work to fix other people's computing problems, that's all. :-)
> 
> Godfrey
> 
> 

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