Posted on 07/13/2002 8:16:19 AM PDT by Dallas
Those who surf the Web using a Mac tend to be better educated and make more money than their PC-using counterparts, according to a report from Nielsen/NetRatings.
The study also said Mac users tend to be more Web savvy, with more than half having been online for at least five years. And the Mac faithful are 58 percent more likely than the overall online population to build their own Web page and also slightly more likely to buy goods online, according to the report.
"With above-average household income and education levels, the Mac population presents a very attractive target for marketers, both online and offline," the research group said.
TS Kelly, director and principal analyst at NetRatings, said that his company decided to publish the study after noticing the differences between the demographics of Mac owners compared with overall PC owners. Kelly said Apple Computer is a client, but he said Apple did not commission the study nor was it made aware of the results prior to the report's publication.
Kelly said the greater affluence and education level of those who surf using a Mac is attributable in part to the company's comparatively pricier machines, as well as to their perception as a status symbol and their greater market share among those in the publishing and design industries.
"Any time you lower a price point you always see a broadening of the audience that is probable to buy it," Kelly said.
"Apple customers may be educated, but our customers are smart enough to have chosen Gateway, which offers the best value," said Brad Williams, a spokesman for the PC maker.
Apple has been aggressively targeting PC owners in its latest ad campaign.
Although Apple sales typically represent less than 5 percent of the overall U.S. personal computer market, 8.2 percent of Americans who surf the Web at home do so using a Mac, according to the study. Nearly all the rest of those who go online--89.4 percent--do so using a Windows-based PC.
Nielsen/NetRatings said that 70.2 percent of Mac users online have a college degree, compared with 54.2 percent of all Web surfers. That, combined with their longer surfing histories and their greater willingness to buy products via the Web, makes Mac consumers a prime catch for marketers, Kelly said.
"In many cases that is a market advertisers are looking at when they are promoting new products or upscale products," Kelly said.
A representative for PC maker Dell noted that it doesn't seem to be lacking for customers and that half of those customers buy their PCs over the Web--a sign that Windows users are also adept online.
The study notes that although there are clear benefits to marketing to Mac owners, it can be tough to target them specifically.
Once upon a time, marketers could target personal computer users as a whole to reach a more-educated, higher-income base, however the demographics of those with a personal computer have become more similar to the demographics of the overall population as personal computer penetration has grown. Kelly said advertisers can still reach upscale crowds in other ways, such as targeting those who have a broadband connection.
The trouble can be mostly relieved by
At least once a day, rebuild the invisible Desktop Files.
Mac's need to be restarted through the day, to refresh the Finder memory stack, so to speak.
And a hot tip: If you are using SCSI drives, you must enable the Term[ination] Power [jumper] of the drive mechanism(s); the SCSI cards "out there" can supply Term Power, but I've found that data pumping becomes more reliable when using the hard drive's, though on internal SCSI hard drive installations, I allow the Termination to be set by the card(s). So, again, the internal SCSI hard drive's Term Power is enabled, it's Termination is disabled --- the SCSI card does not supply Term Power, but the card does supply Termination.
I routinely use a utility known as File Buddy 6.0.6, to find the invisible Norton Anti-Virus "NAV ... " file and Trash it, in order that it be made anew upon a restart. That file acts as an invisible Desktop File of sorts, for Norton's software, but it also becomes "confused;" but you cannot "rebuild it;" you can only replace it.
Oh yeah, Trash on occasion, these preferences: "Open Transport ... ," "Memory," and "Persistant RAM."
I routinely Trash all Internet-related cache files and "clean out" the cookies.
It was either that or letting Windows hang every thirty seconds (which sort of cut down on my productivity, so to speak). Now I don't have to worry about hardware conflicts, or registry problems and my screen never freezes.
Design, not functionality.
I will take usability orver prettiness any day. Maybe thats why some women prefer MACs. They are sooooo *cute*!
BTW Gateways, notebooks are tough to beat, and regularly lead the pack.
WTF are you talking about. If you are referring to Jackson Pollack, I can tell you that museum is not "filled" with his work. It does feature a couple of his works and they are impressive, epecially if you see them in person. I seriously doubt that you have.
Ha! The same as the Linux geek that jumps in the Mac/PC argument.
---
I especially love the guy who's a "programmer by trade" but is admittedly clueless about computers. I mean, it's laughable - would you hire that guy to program ANYTHING?
It would be like hiring an automobile engineer who doesn't know how to drive.
It's prolly the thing that has kept Bill Gates from owning the entire universe....
So what I need to ask is, if you SWITCH to a MAC, then of course you were intelligent enough to do so, right?....
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