So are there many others out there experiencing this sort of thing?

Bill Palmer's article below points to perhaps one of the major factors that
is now pushing many Windows users to finally consider jumping platforms.
Some many things seem to be lining up now for an increase in Apple's
marketshare for the first time in years methinks.

-Mart 

----------------------------

http://www.billpalmer.net/2004/10/even-i-didnt-know-that-windows-had.html

Even I didn't know that Windows had gotten this bad

..snip...

The funny thing about using Windows is that you find out pretty quickly that
certain websites you visit every day are guilty of throwing pop-up ads at
visitors, except you never knew about it, because Safari's pop-up blocking
actually works. For instance, I never knew that MacCentral threw a pop-up ad
at you about subscribing to MacWorld Magazine until I happened to visit that
site on a PC one day. So it didn't surprise me that pop-up ads began
surfacing almost as soon as I began surfing the web. But at some point
something goes off in your head, a little voice that kind of tells you,
"Hey, you know what? This just doesn't seem right."

I'm pretty sure MacMinute.com isn't set up to throw a pornographic pop-up ad
at its visitors, and I'm quite certain that visiting the mac.com webmail
login in page isn't supposed to trigger a pop-up ad for viagra. In fact, at
one point so many pop-up ads were appearing on the screen, one after
another, that I had trouble locating the actual browser window. And the
kicker was that even after I got them all closed, the taskbar was still
showing that there was one pop-up ad still open...and sure enough, one of
them was designed to pop open completely off-screen so that you couldn't see
it or close it (other than by right-clicking on its tab in the taskbar).

Stuff like this just downright scares me, because the first thing I figure
is that Windows is simply getting its revenge on me by choosing to go
ape-crap precisely at the time I'm using it, so that the owner of the
computer will end up blaming me. But it turns out that my friend was well
aware of the out-of-control pop-up situation. And he wasn't just aware of
it, he was furious about it. He'd just run Ad-Aware earlier that day, and
stripped all kinds of infected crap out of his computer in the process, and
yet here was Internet Explorer going crazy again already. So we ran Ad-Aware
again, which stripped away 34 new infected items. We then immediately ran it
once more, and one new infected file had already found its way into his
system, which is remarkable considering that the computer wasn't even
connected to the internet at this time.

We checked to make sure that pop-up blocking was enabled in Internet
Explorer. We checked to make sure that Service Pack 2 really was installed,
and that all of the latest so-called "security" updates were installed as
well. And sure enough, this computer was every bit as "secure" as Microsoft
deemed that it needed to be. Except whoops, yeah, the usability of the
computer was disintegrating in front of our eyes as we sat there watching.

You know, I've heard one too many horror stories of people's Windows PCs
falling into what they would describe as a nearly unusable state due to the
ad-ware, spy-ware, and mal-ware that had built up in their computer...but I
never could have imagined that it was this bad. Of all the dozens of major
reasons for Switching to the Mac, I'd really never quite understood why so
many potential switchers ranked the security thing so far above seemingly
more compelling reasons such as the interface, the consistency, iLife,
Safari, all the innovation, and so on. But sitting there Saturday night in
front of a one-year-old Windows PC that had been absolutely brought to its
knees by security-related issues, I finally "got" it. This really is a huge
thing. The Windows platform really is literally being shredded as we speak.

My friend and I both concluded that some kind of deeply buried crap-ware was
replicating the infected stuff just as fast as Ad-aware could get rid of it.
He asked me what the solution was, and I told him that I honestly wasn't
sure whether he would need to upgrade to the paid version of Ad-aware, or
purchase some other, more powerful tool. So naturally, he asked me what I
use on my computer to fight off this kind of nonsense. And before I could
even manage to figure out how to answer that question, he answered it for
me. It was time for him to finally "get" something that I'd been trying to
get him to understand for years.

"This doesn't happen to Apples, does it?" he asked out loud, not so much in
the form of a question, but more along the lines of a lightbulb going off in
his head. "No, never," I told him, explaining this that kind of crap just
doesn't happen to well-built, well-designed operating systems. And at that
point, I pretty much knew what was coming next:

"That's it, I'm never buying another PC again."

And there it was.

The two of us have had many conversations about Macs and PCs over the years
(most of them initiated by him, actually), so he's been fully aware for some
time now that Macs are better than PCs at just about every aspect of
computing. But in all that time, the idea of having a vastly better
computing experience had simply never motivated him to do anything about
it...because all along, Windows had been "good enough" to get by on. Not
"good enough" in the sense that you would even want to try to do anything
with the computer that would go above and beyond the bare minumum. But good
enough in the sense that you could actually spend twenty minutes a day on
the internet and visit half a dozen websites without the system having a
total meltdown. Except now, his PC was no longer even "good enough" for
that. And he could see that even if he got the infections on his PC cleared
up, or even if he bought a brand new PC, the Windows operating system is
enough of a disaster that there was no reason to think that he'd be safe
from another such meltdown.

All the sudden he wanted to know actual specifics about Macintosh models,
specs, prices, retail locations...the kinds of questions that mean that the
person's line of thinking has progressed beyond "Should I switch to the
Mac?" and even beyond "Yes, I should switch to the Mac," and has now reached
the point of "I want to switch to the Mac."

After looking at every Mac make and model out there, he decided he wants a
12 inch iBook with a Combo drive, which comes out to $999 (actually $949
since he's a student), comfortably below the magic thousand dollar mark. I
couldn't help but think to myself that if this had been two weeks ago, that
price would still have been $1099, which I think he would have rejected as
being too high. But this new price he was OK with (especially when he saw
that it actually came with everything he needed), and he told me that he'd
been setting aside money to upgrade his current PC, and he would now instead
be earmarking that money for an iBook. It's going to take him awhile,
especially with that "1.5 children" thing going on, but he'll get there
eventually.

Remember what I said a few weeks back about Windows users making up their
mind to Switch to the Mac all the way back in 2002, but only beginning to
pull the trigger now here in 2004? Well, here's a case of someone who just
decided to Switch now, and who knows how long it'll take him to actually get
there. The greater point is, of course, that the great influx of refugees
pouring into the Mac platform is only now beginning to get underway. And
after finally seeing first-hand just how badly the Windows platform is
falling apart, I'm now convinced that the influx is going to be even larger
than I'd thought. Now, I know that not every PC is as bad off as his was,
but it would now appear that every PC has a good chance of ending up being
that bad off, and I can't help but think that it's only a matter of time
until the majority of existing Windows machines are no longer usable at all.

It's one thing to be the better platform. It's a whole other thing to be the
only usable platform out there. You do the math.


--------------------------------------
Martin Hill
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
homepages: http://mart.ozmac.com
Mb: 0417-967-969  hm: (08)9314-5242