| loadedstatement said:Generally, yes. But for a good reason. My mac right now came with tons of applications (Address Book, Music Editor, Calendar, IM Client, DVD menu maker, Movie editor, Image editor, Music organizer, Presentation maker, Word Processor, Mail client, built-in mic and camera, Internet browser, etc). Every mac comes with all of this for free. Plus I've owned a Mac for 15+ years and I've had it freeze about 4 times and I have never run a virus scan or picked up a virus (And trust me, I've seen the whole internet). |
It comes with so many useful programs? You don't get to choose if it comes with those with very obvious and simple menus specifically asking you if you want them? I hope they have those. Otherwise maybe they're well on the path of trying to get an anti-trust suit like Microsoft. Heh, don't worry, only half joking.
I tried some Macs back maybe 10 years ago or so, and they have always crashed far more than Windows did for me , so I got turned off from them. I have seen some of the more recent ones over the last few years, and at least they seemed stable, but currently I'm Windows on my desktop and Linux on my laptop.Note: I actually considered Windows 98 to be very stable as basically the only time I got blue screens or problems were when I messed with something, so that's user error. Where I've had Macs crash or close programs for seemingly no reason without my having done anything to them.







