Mac OS X
I finally sucked it up and bought a Mac. I knew about how smooth the system was, but in all my years have never had one as my primary machine. I ordered a refurbished Mac mini Core Duo 1.66 with 512MB and a Combo drive. Certainly not a powerhouse but I decided that if I wind up loving it, I’ll order a more substantial box and relegate this one to media center duty.
Within the first hour of use (not including all the OS upgrades), I was using all up and running with a Bluetooth wireless keyboard and Mighty Mouse. I also had my Nokia 6682’s contacts synchronized with Address Book via Bluetooth. iTunes was playing my music library, Front Row was playing DVD’s (from across the room with the Apple Remote) and I was surfing the web with Firefox.
The out-of-the-box experience is first rate. Nothing else out there compares. Windows has a lot of good hardware support but as of Windows XP MCE 2005, it still didn’t play DVD’s without a third-party coded installed. And Bluetooth? Good luck!
There are things I haven’t adjusted to yet. Avidly using, supporting and administering every version of Windows from 3.0 forms some pretty strong habits.
- The mouse acceleration curves are just wrong and you can’t adjust them. Things like MouseFix are out there, but leaving this parameter off of the Mouse control panel widget is just inexcusable.
- The side buttons on the Mighty Mouse are so hard to press, they might as well not exist. Other than that, the thing is fantastic.
- Checkboxes and buttons don’t get focus. For a keyboad-centric user like myself, this is a big deal. The typical username/login/remember combination of just about every website now requires me to go touch the mouse. Suck. This isn’t in every browser, though. Safari and Firefox behave this way, but Camino (which uses what looks like the native checkbox widget) allows focus. Go figure.
- The keyboard is nice, but dammit, can’t they make an ergonomic one?
If anyone has advice for these gripes, I’m all ears.