This isn't hibernation, where the contents are dumped to disk (which can take a LOT longer than 7 or 8 seconds on a 1 GB RAM system). This is sleep, or in PC parlance, standby. A feature that I have never seen work reliably on the PC side of the fence.
Run an application with full handwriting recognition (TabletPC) that actually works
Inkwell. It's slick. Uses the Newton handwriting recognition software that has been improved over the years. Plug in a graphics tablet, and the technology is enabled.
(I think this factor may drive Macs out of education at the college level.
I doubt it. Handwriting is a horrible input method. Slow and inefficient. It has its specialized applications.
- Create a professional, data-driven web site with user authentication, caching, sophisticated themes and menus, etc. - in less than an hour (ASP.NET 1.0 is pretty good, but 2.0 is amazing - you won't believe what can you do until you try it)
Not my field, so I'll have to pass on comment, though Web Objects is supposed to be pretty amazing.
- Easily develop smart client programs that can run on a large majority of the desktops out there with a high degree of usability, yet get their data via Web Services from anywhere on the Internet. This enables highly distributed systems to function with the almost all the usability of local systems.
This sounds like marketing speak for thin clients. We'll see. Bandwidth is a bear with these sorts of solutions.
Plug in just about anything that one can buy at CompUSA or Office Max, and know that the device drivers are available for XP, and it will almost certainly run right out of the box.
I'll throw all of your usability points away to save the experience of trying to buy and install peripherals from a much smaller set of options. In my long microcomputer experience, working with peripherals has easily been the source of the most frustrating episodes.
Because you use Windows. You sort of contradicted yourself, here, and the driver implementation on Windows stinks.
I plug in a USB mouse on my Mac and it works immediately. I unplug it and plug it into a different port, and it works immediately. I plug in a second mouse, or a different mouse, and it works immediately.
I plug in a mouse in WinXP, and I have to wait while a wizard launches and runs through the whole searching for drivers for your new hardware device wizard. Yeah, it runs automatically, but I'm twiddling my thumbs while the process goes on.
Unplug my mouse and plug it into a different USB port, and guess what? It does it again.
Plug in a different mouse and it does it again.
I bought an external USB 2.0 hard drive for my Mac. It came with a Windows driver disk. A driver for an external hard drive?!?! Sure enough, it wouldn't recognize until I ran and installed the driver.
There is one area where the Mac is clearly ahead, and it is of major consequence. You are quite correct to emphasize the ease of installation of software on Macs. Dependence on COM in Windows
And that Spawn of Satan known as the Registry.
The objective conclusion here is that the Mac user experience is overall superior to the Windows experience. There may be specialized markets where Windows is required, but if you ask most people why they use Windows you'll get one of the following answers (your arguments are on this list)
Personally, I'm happy to be off the Windows juggernaut, and have no desire to go back, but to each their own.
"Plug in a graphics tablet, and the technology is enabled."
Kind of hard to tote around a graphics tablet to class or to patient's rooms.
Handwriting is a horrible input method. Slow and inefficient. It has its specialized applications.
For notes, handwriting is the best input method that's ever been developed. I've now stopped using paper notebooks, and always keep notes on the Tablet. They are searchable, easy to back up, easy to email to anyone who needs to see them...
I've conceded advantages to the Mac for certain things. You need to do the same for the areas Windows is clearly ahead. And programs with a handwriting interface is clearly one of them.