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Why I just love the new iMac (and why you might, too)
ZD Net Anchor Desk ^ | 2-4-02 | David Coursey

Posted on 02/04/2002 6:39:48 AM PST by gratefulwharffratt

David Coursey,
Executive Editor, AnchorDesk
Monday, February 4, 2002


It's been a week since I started using a new iMac as my full-time desktop and a PowerBook G4 as my portable PC, all as part of my month-long challenge to see if I, long a loyal Windows user, could make Apple the center of my computing universe. There are still a few problems--specifically related to getting PDA data in and out of Microsoft Office.

But besides that, I've made a very smooth transition. I have even started using the Apple key instead of the Control key when cutting and pasting.

None of the photos I've seen do the new iMac justice. It's hard to take a picture of a white computer with a clear frame around the screen and make it look good. It is especially difficult to do this against a white background, as Apple is prone to do. They had the same problem with the iPod, which people thought was much larger than it is because they had seen it only on a billboard. Now, they didn't think it was that big, but...

If you are trying to show off the iMac base--about the size of a big salad bowl turned upside down--it's hard to have the monitor in a normal position. This is probably why the best pictures of the new iMac, such as they are, have been taken from the side. That shows off the arm that connects the screen to the base rather nicely.

IN USE, the base of the iMac, which contains the computer itself, essentially disappears from view, hidden by the screen. The screen--a 15-inch flat panel--has all the predictable benefits of LCD displays, but the mounting mechanism is really special. This is the first time I've been able to position a screen precisely where I want it.

Mac OS X also does an excellent job of driving the screen, with great graphics performance. I am not quite so wild about the characters that show up while I am typing using Word or the other Microsoft Office apps. Microsoft has yet to fully implement the features of OS X that put great-looking fonts onto the screen.

This was likely lost in the rush to get a version of OS X to market and will be resolved in a future release. The "poor" quality of the Microsoft fonts is noticeable because the rest of the computer looks so great, not because it's putting my eyes out or anything.

The iMac has no fan--actually it has a fan, but I've never heard it--meaning my office is quieter than it used to be. The fan is thermally controlled, so it turns on only if the machine heats up. The iMac also has a very small footprint, leaving me with a lot of unused desk space.

If I were making any changes to the iMac, I'd increase the screen resolution (1024x768 is standard) or go to a 17-inch screen. The higher resolution is a personal preference (I need more open windows sometimes), and boosting the screen size would make the machines too expensive. To think of it, so would the increased resolution.

I'VE DISPENSED with the Apple one-button mouse that came with the machine. I replaced it with a Microsoft optical mouse with all the buttons and a thumbwheel. I just plugged it in, and it worked immediately. While the stock Apple mouse--with its single button--doesn't support right clicking, all the iMac apps seem to. This gives me access to a wide range of shortcuts I've grown used to under Windows. "Real" Apple users know you can control-click the one-button mouse to access the right-button features, but I still like my extra buttons and the thumbwheel.

The transition to the Mac way of doing things has been pretty easy, once I got the hang of the docking bar that is the OS X equivalent of the Windows start menu. Now that I have all my frequently used apps in the dock, I am a pretty happy camper.

Based on my experience, I have no reservations whatsoever recommending an iMac as a family's new or next home computer. Only really hard-core gamers would have trouble with a Mac, and those people should be looking at the new gaming consoles anyway.

I'M TEMPTED to say that Apple should have waited to make OS X the standard operating system for its consumer Macs, at least until there was better support for things such as Palm PDAs, media players for Windows Media, and Real Networks file formats. But as Steve Jobs told me on Day 1 of my Mac odyssey, there are some things that simply won't happen until the OS becomes the Apple standard.

I can't really disagree with that logic, so this is more a warning that you may find yourself working in classic mode from time to time. I am doing my very best to remain totally in OS X, so I have to admit that my concerns about this issue may be inflated.

As for working from the iMac, I can only hit the corporate Exchange mail server using a POP client or a Web browser. This isn't a problem for me, but it may be for a few of you. I also have not tried to find a VPN client, so I need to call our IS department and inquire.

The lack of OS X support for both Palm and Pocket PC devices is, however, troublesome. I think this will be worked out, at least for Pocket PC (and only with the help of a third-party developer) in a few weeks. Palm OS support will doubtless come, though I cannot today tell you when with any level of confidence. Six months seems likely.

I'VE HAD NO trouble exchanging files with colleagues, sending and receiving e-mail, or browsing the Web. And the free mail client Apple provides, though lacking a calendar function, works very well. Actually it's a better pure mail client than Microsoft's Entourage, its office productivity suite for the Macintosh platform.

It's for this reason that so many Mac users have separate calendar, contact management, and e-mail programs. The single-solution approach, àla Outlook and Entourage, is very attractive, but I am looking at other options as well.

The iPod is a fantastic MP3 player, and iTunes does a good job of managing my music. I want to find a "disco" software package, which I believe exists, to do some mixing, but the basic dubbing of music from CD (or Internet) to computer to iPod works very well.

THE MORE I USE IPHOTO, the more useful I find it. The program is not a photo editor, although it will allow you to crop a photo, correct red eye, and convert color images to black and white.

But iPhoto really shines in managing a large photo collection, thanks to its ability to vary thumbnails of the photos from very tiny to full-screen. This means you can zoom back and easily scroll through hundreds or, more likely, thousands of photos and then zoom in to pick the one you want.

iPhoto is also great for sharing your images. While the program does not have an easy way to resize and e-mail an image, it does a very nice job of collecting photos into books, which you can print at home or have commercially printed by Apple ($30 for 10 pages, and the books are really quite nice). iPhoto can also be used to create slide shows, HTML photo pages, and, of course, order prints.

OVERALL, I'D RATE the Macintosh photo "experience" significantly superior to Windows XP, although XP has the basics covered.

I have not played with iMovie, but finally have an idea for a home movie project (lacking kids, I have no ready players), so I am planning to compare the Mac and XP cinematic experiences this weekend.

Another area in which OS X has a little maturing to do is support for streaming media. Microsoft Media Player doesn't support all its formats on the new OS, meaning I can't listen to a number of online radio stations. Real doesn't seem to have announced an OS X version of RealPlayer, though I suspect one will appear.

So that's where things stand after the first week of "Mac Month" here in my office. About the only thing I am still using the XP box for is some instant messaging (especially during the radio program) and to keep the Outlook telephone directory open when I need to make a quick phone call.


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: macuserlist; techindex
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And the ZD Net Anchor Desk can hardly be called "Pro Macintosh."
1 posted on 02/04/2002 6:39:48 AM PST by gratefulwharffratt
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To: gratefulwharffratt
no barf alert?
2 posted on 02/04/2002 6:40:45 AM PST by College Repub
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To: gratefulwharffratt
I've been using laptops as my "full time desktop" since 1993, when I bought a 486-33 Toshiba with gas plasma screen. ALL laptops in the past decade have made fine desktops. The only Mac I've used was at Kinko's, and it crashed, same as any Windows computer. I see no difference between Macs and Windows PCs. I don't know why Mac users think their systems are so much different & better than those of us Win users.

FWIW, I currently use a 3-year-old Pentium II-366 laptop, which fits all my needs. Might be several years before I upgrade again.

3 posted on 02/04/2002 6:50:52 AM PST by Commie Basher
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The "poor" quality of the Microsoft fonts… As a long-time Mac and PC user, the weakest part of my computing is when I have to use Microsoft Apps - on either platform. Adobe and Mac are at least an order of magnitude superior software developers.
4 posted on 02/04/2002 6:51:11 AM PST by D-fendr
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To: College Repub;cheney chick;sabertooth
You MicroSloth shills are showing up by post number two these days...

You are becoming ever more diligent in your Kool-Aid drinking.

5 posted on 02/04/2002 6:52:16 AM PST by gratefulwharffratt
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To: College Repub
no barf alert?

How can you be so right about the Middle East, and so wrong about this?


But I still want an iMac with a 17" monitor.

6 posted on 02/04/2002 6:55:40 AM PST by Sabertooth
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To: Sabertooth
PCS!!!!! Macs give me headaches...I hate the keyboad, the mouse, and the generic application layouts...anything good they offer over pcs beyond that totaly escapes me due to those 3 initial pains in my ass..
7 posted on 02/04/2002 7:00:32 AM PST by College Repub
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To: null and void
It's been a week since I started using a new iMac as my full-time desktop and a PowerBook G4 as my portable PC, all as part of my month-long challenge to see if I, long a loyal Windows user, could make Apple the center of my computing universe."

"So that's where things stand after the first week of "Mac Month" here in my office. About the only thing I am still using the XP box for is some instant messaging (especially during the radio program) and to keep the Outlook telephone directory open when I need to make a quick phone call.


Hmmm, if it only takes a week for the FULLY indoctrinated Winbloze user to see the error of their ways, then the conversion must be nearly instantaneous for people who DON'T derive their income from using and pushing MS products.
8 posted on 02/04/2002 7:00:43 AM PST by gratefulwharffratt
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To: gratefulwharffratt
iphoto does a great job of preparing JPG's for email. It takes a huge tiff file or JPG and compresses it to a JPG that is about 200K Looks a 10+ on the receivers end..... I have 24 Macs running my company
9 posted on 02/04/2002 7:04:35 AM PST by primatreat
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To: D-fendr
I find this very strange. One of the best parts of using Windows XP is ClearType. If you have a laptop and XP, not using ClearType is a crime. It is on the Effects dialog on the Appearance tab in the Display Properties. The sans-serif fonts in the FR page headers look super-clean with ClearType on.
10 posted on 02/04/2002 7:05:07 AM PST by eno_
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To: gratefulwharffratt
The iMac is but a toy, for fairies and Democrats. Real men and Republicans use Wintel.
11 posted on 02/04/2002 7:06:46 AM PST by montag813
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To: gratefulwharffratt
Yeah, yeah, and the Betamax format was much better than VHS. I guess this guy is still gushing over his Beta tape collection.

Apple is--and will continue to be--a niche market inside another niche market, a cult rather than a culture. It's verrry "in" with the Chardonay-and-Brie crowd in Marin County. "Quantity has a quality all its own," and the quiche-eating mob at Apple will never get it.

--Boris

12 posted on 02/04/2002 7:09:15 AM PST by boris
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To: gratefulwharffratt
Coursey did admit in a previous column, sometime last year, that he voted for Algore. Like the line in the movie Shrek, "Well, that explains a lot."
13 posted on 02/04/2002 7:11:59 AM PST by KarlH
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To: eno_
What about kerning (letter spacing), tracking, ligatures in PowerPoint, fontography and cursor selection of text in Word? I've used the same programs for thousands of hours on both platforms. The Mac is faster, cleaner and runs better. And any mac or adobe text or graphic handling is superior on either platform.

This would seem odd with text since TrueType is a Mac/Microsoft product. Still the more Mac and the less MS, the better it looks and the better it operates.

Adobe Postscript fonts are more hassle, but if you want top quality, they are still the standard.

14 posted on 02/04/2002 7:18:17 AM PST by D-fendr
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To: montag813
--I use both, and I just last week started fooling around with redhat. I'd say they all have plusses and minuses, although I'd also say mac os is more more user friendly out of the box on that list of three. I haven't used osx yet though, so can't comment.

I'd also say real men are able to look at 'computers' as just being good tools, and different tools for different purposes. I have yet to see an adjustable wrench be able to substitute for the whole tool box. These OS neener neener flame posts and wars are beyond stupid. I wish the moderators would ban and delete them immediately on sight, and ban the posters if they persisted. All brands of computers are owned and used by all differering people's political belief structures and pronouncements of same, it's not one or the other, and to insist otherwise is called 'lying through your teeth" and 'trolling"..

15 posted on 02/04/2002 7:21:27 AM PST by zog
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To: *MacUser_list;*tech_index
bump
16 posted on 02/04/2002 7:25:05 AM PST by Libertarianize the GOP
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To: gratefulwharffratt
Oh, I guess just because I prefer to have control over my hardware, software and upgradeability of my computer hardware, I'm a "MicroSloth Shill"?

Tell me, can I play NHL 2002 on an iMac? How 'bout Medal of Honor? Links 2001? Command & Conquer?

Can I modify the image quality of the video card like this? Can I change the video card?

Can I modify the case, like this or like these?

Can I tweak the bios to improve performance? Maybe even overclock the processor to gain more speed?

These are things I do as a hobby, which I cannot do to this machine. Therefore a Mac of any sort is not for me. Does this still make me a "MicroSloth Shill"?

17 posted on 02/04/2002 7:25:29 AM PST by RedWing9
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To: montag813
The iMac is but a toy, for fairies and Democrats. Real men and Republicans use Wintel.


Who are the Linux users then??

BTW, I have built well over five hundred Intel based PCs, with various Winbloze flavors on them, and have sold way more than a million bucks worth of HW at the WHOLESALE level. That means that the questions given me by MY customers, were from the CONSULTANTS.

Strangely enough, they always took my advice, despite my being a Mac user.

18 posted on 02/04/2002 7:26:57 AM PST by gratefulwharffratt
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To: RedWing9
These are things I do as a hobby, which I cannot do to this machine. Therefore a Mac of any sort is not for me. Does this still make me a "MicroSloth Shill"?


Considering that you have just trotted out the same old tired laundry list of 'shortcomings' as all the rest of the Shills, I would say:

YES!!!!!

19 posted on 02/04/2002 7:29:48 AM PST by gratefulwharffratt
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To: boris
Windows is, was, and always shall be, the choice of the crowd, the herd, the masses; steered on by IT professionals, who, like the Jesse Jacksons of the world, would find themselves out of a job if they ever solved the problems they complain about...

While the niche market chugs away.

20 posted on 02/04/2002 7:32:08 AM PST by Mr. Thorne
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