Yokemate of Keyboards
Posts: 4977 from 2009/1/28
From: Delaware, USA
Actually, it was never my intention to hold up one OS over another either. And frankly, I was really surprised when the sucessors to WinXP actually turned out to be more stable and reliable.
As to Macs and their OS, I've always been impressed with certain features that were incorporated into them. Its plainly obvious from some of the similarities between OSX and Windows that Microsoft has taken some clues from Apple as well.
And I'll go one step further, Microsoft's pricing on its latest upgrades has been really poor. Apple has never abused its customer base as much on upgrade OS pricing.
In no way was anything I said meant to influence anyone or affect their own buying decisions or platform loyalty.
Just to put a final point on it (and then hopefully we can let this post sink into obscurity), I merely meant to point out that since I hadn't had previous experience with using OSX I had always considered the heavily marketed possibility that OSX had some clear points of superiority.
After becoming more familiar with this core Apple product, I'm neither positive or negative about it I'm just more realistic. Like all other OS', it does crash, it can produce at least some minor frustrations (when it doesn't work the way it's supposed to), and it's really not that different (than any other OS).
Once again, I don't care what any of you use. Frankly, in the late 80's and early 90's I was convinced that the next wave of efficient operating systems would be based on micro kernals. The systems my company sold lost out to the market dominance of what I thought were inferior platforms (and by that I mean both Apple and IBM).
So today, while I know MorphOS will never attain a large market presence, and I know we will never get past the a-box and into the q-box (in fact even SMP or 64bit instructions seem unlikely) it's just nice to have an OS built on a kernal type I admire.
Quark (at the core of MorphOS) is a remarkable (and under MorphOS, underutilized) core.
I can't wait to use it one Apple hardware.
As one who is not convinced that Apple always makes the right decisions (see my previous reference to the AppleIII), I'm not sure Apple was right in moving away from PPC processors. Yes, it made good economic sense, but it also reduced the differentiation Apple products had. Plus, from what I've seen just playing around with the 7450, PPC seem to offer really good performance per clock cycle (something that Apple touted while they were selling them).
To close, I entered some of these messages on a Powermac, others I entered on an AMD based PC. Again, I didn't notice a significant difference between either of these platforms and that unsure sense of potential envy is gone.
Now I'm just waiting for the next revision of MorphOS.
[ Edited by Jim on 2010/3/20 2:28 ]
[ Edited by Jim on 2010/3/20 2:30 ]
[ Edited by Jim on 2010/3/20 2:32 ]
"Never attribute to malice what can more readily explained by incompetence"