Mac vs. PC - Let The Flame Wars Begin
Vista July 10th. 2008, 4:13pmMac is not better than PC. It’s just different. If you think otherwise you really need to check your sources.
I’ve tried to stay out of the moronic Mac vs. PC debackle as much as I can but a conversation I overheard yesterday finally pushed me over the edge so now I’m not keeping my mouth shut any more:
Here are some facts:
- Macs are far less stable and secure and far more buggy and prone to crashes than people are willing to admit
- Windows Vista doesn’t really have any compatibility problems
- Mac is not the industry standard for video editing
- There is no discernible difference in workload, efficiency or quality of the end result whether you are on a Mac or a PC
- The days when Mac was the only platform you should use for digital imaging etc are long gone (as in early 1990’s long gone)
- The fact that you own an Apple product (iPod, iPhone, iMac, iRack whatever) does not make you cooler, smarter, better or more skilled than anyone else
If you’re a Mac user you are probably running frantically around the house whiping away the foam collecting around your mouth while you look for your Anti-PC-User Emergency Kit. If so just calm down and take a deep breath: I don’t have anything against you nor your choice of operating system - I just don’t like being looked down on or ridiculed by your kind because of my preference, especially when the arguments they present as reasons for using Mac instead of PC are nothing but advertising propaganda from Mr. Jobs and his staff.
What started it all
Anyways, back to my story: We just picked up a large video editing contract which includes working with a large variety of content providers (videographers) and consolidating all their differing content into a cohesive show. Unfortunately the content providers are amateurs who don’t know too much about video editing and especially industry standards when it comes to output. As a result we got a myriad of different formats and compressions that we needed to work with.
Normally this wouldn’t be a problem but because almost all of these videographers work on Final Cut Pro or iMovie and none of them know anything about export or compression other than how to publish videos to YouTube it quickly became a nightmare. You see when you use the click and “it just works” approach promoted by Apple, you get a video format that only works on Macs. This is because it’s quicker to export Mac native formats than to convert the video to an industry standard format like DV/DVCPRO. Unfortunately the videographers are under the impression that Mac is the de facto industry standard and therefore that if the file doesn’t play it is because we are stupid PC users. This couldn’t be farther from the truth:
The industry standard is AVID.
When we tried to explain this issue to the people we are working with we got the following mind-numbing and infuriating response (from a Mac user of course):
The reason it doesn’t work is because you are on a Vista PC. Microsoft doesn’t follow standards and doesn’t work. Switch to a Mac!
Right. I don’t even know where to start with this. First of all, the problem is caused by the videos being encoded using a proprietary Mac codec that is about as non-standard as you can get. In fact the codec only works in Final Cut Pro, nowhere else. And like I said, FCP is not the industry standard. Seccondly Microsoft doesn’t actually make pro video editing software: We use Adobe Premiere CS3. So if there was a problem with the software it would be Adobe’s fault, not Microsoft. Thirdly switching to Mac to solve the problem is about as good advice as telling someone whose tire you just slashed to buy a new car.
Don’t believe everything you hear
At the root of all this bullshit is the ingenious if misleading advertising campaign Apple has been running for the last 15 years claiming that their software “just works” and is far supperior to any other platform. If you go back about two decades, Mac ruled the design world because of it’s supperior graphics handling capabilities. But those days are long gone and today Mac and PC compete on an even playing field in this respect. Case in point: The industry standard for design software is the Adobe Creative Suite which runs identically on both platforms.
Today there are only two real differences between a Mac and every other computer on the planet:
- It uses Mac OS
- It contains a chip whose sole purpose it is to tell the Mac OS that this is a genuine Mac
In fact Mac OS works fine on any computer as long as you trick it to not look for that chip. But while Microsoft is a software company, Apple is a hardware company and they need to have some way of forcing their customers to buy their hardware so they tie their operating system to their hardware using that chip. That’s why you can run Windows on a Mac but not vice versa. In the real world this would be called monopolization and unfair business practice but for some unknown reason noone has really spoken up about this and tested it in court.
“It just works*”
The Mac slogan “it just works” should come with an asterix:
By “works” we mean that as long as your system is operational it is unlikely to crash. However if it does crash you are likely to loose 100% of your data and the lost data is unrecoverable. Also, we may choose to change our operating system or platform at any time in which case you need to buy all new hardware and software if you want to continue being part of our exclusive club.
Case in point: My friend Anthony has a G4 Mac that he used for video editing. One day his system stopped working. Further investigation showed it was no longer working becuase the logic board was dead. So he took it to the Mac store and asked them to fix it. The guy at the store looked at the computer and told him they no longer support the chipset (Mac had just switched to the new Intel chips) so he would have to switch out the whole logic board to the new chipset. The cost? $2000 (more than the cost of a new Mac). After much back and forth Anthony ended up buying a new iMac instead. But when he got home a new nasty surprise was in store: None of his expensive software worked in his new iMac. A quick call to the store uncovered the unbelieveable answer: With the new chipset comes a whole new operating system that is not compatible with the old software. So he had to go out and buy new versions of his old software just to be able to open his old files.
Now imagine if Microsoft had pulled this kind of crap on their clients.
Vista Sucks
Since it’s release more than 2 yars ago Windows Vista has gotten an incredible ammount of flack from everyone from the tech press to pundits to my grandfather’s best man twice removed. Surprisingly about 99% of this flack is unwarranted nonsense generated by idiots who have never tried the operating system or don’t understand how computers work.
One of the main attacks on Vista is that it isn’t compatible with hardware. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve read articles about how nothing works, how the drivers are full of bugs and that people are downgrading to XP. Well here’s some food for thought:
If the driver doesn’t work it is because the company that made the driver didn’t do a good enough job. And the drivers are made by the hardware manufacturer, not Microsoft!
So when people say their hardware doesn’t work and the drivers are crap and point their fingers at Microsoft they are blaming the wrong company. To put it in perspective think about this: If you bought a headset for your iPhone that said “iPhone Compatible” but didn’t work, who would you blame? The headphone manufacturer of course. It’s the same with driver incompatibility.
People have just gotten too used to blaming Microsoft for everything except Global Warming.
PCs crash all the time
More than anything what kills me is when people tell me that PCs crash all the time. Let me tell you something: I have 6 PCs running everything from Windows ME to Windows Vista Ultimate. In the last 6 years all my PCs combined have crashed maybe 10 times and in almost every case it was either due to hardware failure (mostly dead hard drives) or ill advised experiments at rewriting the registry or bios (aka. me being an idiot). With properly installed hardware and software the Windows platform is incredibly stable. And when something goes wrong it’s easy to find out why and how to fix it.
In answer to this ground breaking CNN worthy news I can hear all my Mac friends yelling “but you’ll get infected by viruses!”. I haven’t had a virus in 10 years. Why? Because I have a $20 router between my home network and the outside world and I don’t download dubious files from the net or my inbox. So here’s my response: I can kill your Mac in 30 seconds flat! And if I do, all your data is unrecoverable. You can’t do that to a PC without a huge magnet or a sledge hammer.
Your choice of Operating System should never define you
What never seizes to amaze me is the willingness of Mac users to let their choice of operating system define them. They seem to think that because they are using a Mac they are somehow better and different from the rest of the computer using world. Which is strange seeing as Mac is the most uniform computer brand out there: You have zero choice when it comes to customizability or identity - everything looks the same. And if you use any of the famed iLife programs the results invariably have that Mac cookie-cutter look. The grim reality is that in the end it is your creativity that matters, not what computer or operating system you use. You can make stunning artwork with a PC form 1993 and total crap with the most high-end Mac available - it’s all up to you.
So here’s the conclusion (forward all hate mail to my summer house at 1 Pennsylvania Avenue):
Macs are great if you don’t want to spend time learning how a computer work or if you want to live a cookie cutter lifestyle. If you want creative input you need to upgrade to 3rd party software such as Adobe’s Creative Suite in which case you can get a far better PC for the same price.
And before you start barfing up that ever popular “Final Cut Pro is vastly supperior to Premiere Pro” crap consider this: The reason Adobe is re-releasing Premiere Pro for Mac is because Mac users are asking for it. And Premiere Pro was designed by the same people that created FCP.
In the end I don’t care what you use. All that matters is what you produce. But don’t tell me you are better than me because you spent more money on your computer. The only thing you show with such a statement is your narrowminded inability to think critically. Sorry, but that’s how the cookie crumbles.
Flame on!



















July 11th, 2008 at 5:39 pm
Mac SUCKS and Microsoft can’t make software or hardware(xbox360) that works! although if i HAD to use either of them it would be microsofts evil OS, but thankfully i discovered Linux and ohhh how great the speed/stability/free software and everything else that comes along with it, and if this turns into “cant run this, can’t run that on linux”
haha wine or cedega usually do the trick.
well anyways, PEACE.
July 11th, 2008 at 6:08 pm
Unfortunately in my line of work I have to use one of the standard platforms: WINE just doesn’t cut it when you work with audio and video editing. Even so Linux is making incredible strides and I can see a time in the not so distant future when main stream software manufacturers like Adobe start selling their applications with Linux compatibility as well. If that happened there would finally be true competition.
July 17th, 2008 at 6:07 am
Very well worded! I’ve faced the same battle on a semi-regular basis and you’ve hit the nail on the head, especially in regards to Vista and compatiblity, it’s the VENDORS that need to make stable drivers… but, this is a Microsoft Bashing World we live in and the Mac user is breed on their own. Mac’s were definintely the choice, but as you’ve very plainly stated.. that was then, this is now…. Sorry Mac heads.. get with the times. While MS/Vista/XP have their flaws, so do Mac’s, nothings perfect.
Keep up the great work Morten… you deserve full props for this one!
July 21st, 2008 at 8:03 pm
Although there is more than a grain of truth in some of this- the majority of your comparison between Mac and PC is completely wrong- total crap. I do graphic design and video editing and run many Macs and PCs and have done for 5 years+- I have never had a single virus on a Mac, never needed anti virus, never had an error message. Sorry to disappoint you Microsoft fan boy but most of the time Macs do work- have more processing power available and I have found them to be significantly more stable. Vista is a disaster, is unreliable- uses too much power- is dreadfully buggy and businesses just do not have the time to waste fixing never ending compatibility problems. Macs are not infallible - but the operating system is quicker and more stable in everything it does- The software is a different story altogether and you make some valid points.
July 21st, 2008 at 11:21 pm
@ Goonergerry:
I love it when people call me “Microsoft Fanboy” - nothing could be further from the truth. I’m Linux all the way but have been forced into the world of MS because software vendors in general don’t make software for my preferred platform.
In spite of what you may believe, my comparisons that you so respectuflly refer to as “total crap” are in fact entirely based on experience and 100% accurate. To this date the only problems we have with our multiple PCs has been hardware related (as in busted SATA cables, fried processors etc). The only real issue we had with Vista was that Adobe in their infinite wisdom refused to publish updates for Premiere Pro CS2 for Vista which can hardly be blamed on Microsoft.
As for viruses, there are really only two ways of getting them these days: 1. connect your computer directly to the web without a go-between like a router or 2. download and install the virus yourself (i.e. open an executable file from an email etc). The first one can be fixed by spending $15 on a router (that goes for Mac users too) and the seccond one… well, if you’re indiscriminately opening executables from unknown sources you really need a refresher on the issue of information safety.
My point which you seem to have missed is that Mac users tend to have a dogmatic and religious view of their chosen platform and often see themselves as supperior to the rest of us simply because of that. Which would have been OK if there was any truth to their claims. But in reality the difference between Mac and PC is dismal at best. The rest is just advertising hype.
July 30th, 2008 at 5:53 pm
I looked up mac vs. pc on google, trying to find something impartial, and after 2 pages this was the first thing I found. I have always thought of mac users as “The sheltered rich kid”, their Parents “Apple” feed them bullshit about the real world, and they live happily on it, while also spending a fortune on computers. Not to mention they aren’t allowed to chose which programs they use for themselves.
I know this is a very PC sided statement, but I swear you can only make fun of new OS bugs that are fixed for vista and poor installation that doesn’t happen if you read the damned text. Apple is beating a dead horse on the vista front.
But I have to say, the time machine commercial made me laugh, I seriously wonder if they even have a PC in the damned building, system restore ftw?
August 8th, 2008 at 8:19 am
Don’t you think most viruses are written for Windows users?