HeatherKay wrote:big_D wrote:I don't have a fortune invested in Mac specific software (no Adobe CS for OS X etc.).
Okay, leaving aside the fortune I have invested in software, I find the relatively high initial cost of purchasing a Mac laptop is more than outweighed by the length of service I expect.
I am typing this on a 2007 MacBook Pro, bought as a factory refurb. I paid £1500-ish for it in 2007, and I'd have expected to pay the same for a PC lappy of the
same spec.
Back then, the prices weren't too extortionate, you could get "no-name" PCs and laptops much cheaper, but now, you can get good quality named brands for less than half the price. When I bought my iMac in 2006, it cost about 10-15% more than a desktop with a 24" monitor, now, I could buy nearly 2 24" PCs for the price of an iMac 21"... The same, as I showed, for the laptop I just bought, Sony Vaio brand, higher spec, less than half the price of a MBP 17".
Length of service? We currently have a fleet of PCs at work, the mode age is 7 years, the oldest is 15 years old and still in daily use...
The laptop I just replaced is a 2004 model, it is still running fine, but not high enough spec to run the latest software - my girlfriend still uses it, because she just needs web browsing, email and the odd Word document. My desktop PC is also 2007, will probably look at replacing it in another 2 years. The iMac 2006 and it struggles with MS Office 2008, even after a re-install, but I think it might be down to user settings, which TimeMachine brought back, I'll have another go at getting it running, when I can sit at my desk again...
My Gf's family have just started having to replace their machines, as they are slowly dying. Most of them are between 8 and 15 years old.
Developing software, I tend to replace my machines more often, every 4-6 years, as opposed to 8-10 years.
HeatherKay wrote:It's still very capable of running the latest OS and all the software I run. I'm still on the stock 2GB RAM, the stock internal drive, and it's been lugged from pillar to post in most of the time I've owned it. Apart from some handling grime and a bit of shine of the trackpad and keys, it's as good as the day I bought it.
The same goes for the 2004 Acer Extensa. It still looks fine, no major scratches, the keys are a bit shiny, but otherwise it is still in very good condition. With 2GB expansion (it came with 512MB), it is still perfectly usable as an office machine, but doesn't stack up as a power user machine. I did install Vista on it, which ran perfectly fine and Windows 7 is more effcient, so that runs well as well, just not quick enough for me to develop software on.
HeatherKay wrote:I fully expect it to run for at least another couple of years, perhaps more if my economic situation doesn't improve markedly soon. A five year life cycle for a working laptop is not to be sneezed at. I don't think that over the three years I have owned this Mac that it was an expensive option.
Good for you, but my Acer laptop is 6 years old, cost a third of what a PowerBook of that era cost, so it was even more economical...
At work, the only PC to have been replaced inside of 6 years was the one in the acid store - after 4 years of sitting in sulphuric acid fumes, the contatcs on the motherboard had been eaten through!

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