PC or Mac?

I have a laptop that I bought last year but now one of my relatives is saying that Apple is much better in terms of features and speed.

Which one is better in your opinion? My laptop is enormous as its 17" so I want to change it but I have never really used a Mac.

I use it for school and sometimes to see movies when I want to chill.

Thanks.

Re: PC or Mac?

If that's all you do then you shouldn't have any problems. But if your school work include sharing files check with ur friends. Plus the fact that you'd need to spend money to buy one, considering a 1 yr old laptop is pretty new. There is a slight learning curve, but its not that bad.

Prepare to spend anywhere from $1100 for a 13" MacBook to $2000 for a powerful MacBook Pro.

Re: PC or Mac?

some one who told you must have been MAC fan, what extra function do you get with mac when compared to a PC Laptop?
Surely Mac have good graphics and video quality and relatively reliable Operating System, on windows you may have to restart sometime to get it out of misery.

You get less virus with Mac, you also get few hardware and programs that support Mac unless you get specialised version for that.

It all depends what are your reuirements are, if you are in to graphics, designing, gaming, streaming, then go for Mac

If you just want use as Internet, and write up some documents, then keep your present laptop, Mac will not buy u any extra features.

Re: PC or Mac?

get the mac and install windows xp pro natively
best of both worlds on your mac

Re: PC or Mac?

Shak, that person was a PC user all his life, and just recently switched. He said he wishes he had switched years earlier. He got someone else to switch too, and they prefer Mac now also.

I dont know, I guess you are right, I dont use it for much else than school and internet mostly. Will stick with this one for now and will consider changing later. Insha'Allah.

Re: PC or Mac?

I have used both, Windows is tempramental, I personally dont like this OS but its used. I love macs
I like Unix and Mac OS X is based on this.