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Shivahn wrote:I am a motherfucking sorceror.
Jplus wrote:One more thing to take into consideration: energy consumption. In the long run, a laptop that ships for $200 less won't save any money if it takes double the amount of energy.
frezik wrote:Anti-photons move at the speed of dark
DemonDeluxe wrote:Paying to have laws written that allow you to do what you want, is a lot cheaper than paying off the judge every time you want to get away with something shady.
Jplus wrote:The MBP has a normal 77.5 Wh battery, and according to Apple it lasts up to 7 hours on one battery charge. In reality that's probably 6 hours, but I think this proves the machine isn't actually that power-hungry.
By the way: my 12'' iBook from 2004 takes at most 20 W, so that's only half of what your very small laptop takes. You think that's impossible? The Mac Mini takes 7.5 W (that excludes the screen, but still).
Macs are efficient. Really.
Shivahn wrote:I am a motherfucking sorceror.
PhoenixEnigma wrote:Jplus wrote:The MBP has a normal 77.5 Wh battery, and according to Apple it lasts up to 7 hours on one battery charge. In reality that's probably 6 hours, but I think this proves the machine isn't actually that power-hungry.
By the way: my 12'' iBook from 2004 takes at most 20 W, so that's only half of what your very small laptop takes. You think that's impossible? The Mac Mini takes 7.5 W (that excludes the screen, but still).
Macs are efficient. Really.
You're missing the fact that EvanED's numbers are worst case. The 15" MBP hits over 90W under full load, and the mac mini closer to 30W (although that's a slightly older model. Newer mini's will probably idle lower due to the new CPU, but consume more under load due to the 10W higher TDP on that CPU.)
Yakk wrote:Lower power consumption means less heat, longer battery life, and (often) more reliablity (as heat is the devil), and less fan noise (which can be mitigated with quieter fans, but still...)
Steax wrote:I've found that using linux takes a bit more time to tweak to your needs. In several ways it's just like OS X, but it's more geeky and you'll be spending more time in technical things. This is, of course, entirely up to you: if you want to modify and tweak and work on things to get your dream setup, go linux. I personally just want it to run and get out of my way so I can do my actual work, so I use OS X.
What's wrong with dual booting? It's perfectly fine.
yukizora wrote:Steax wrote:I've found that using linux takes a bit more time to tweak to your needs. In several ways it's just like OS X, but it's more geeky and you'll be spending more time in technical things. This is, of course, entirely up to you: if you want to modify and tweak and work on things to get your dream setup, go linux. I personally just want it to run and get out of my way so I can do my actual work, so I use OS X.
What's wrong with dual booting? It's perfectly fine.
You got it wrong, it doesn't take more time. It just demands that you tweak more stuff. On a new install, tweaking will probably take 15 minutes of your time.
For example:
-Create a new user
-Upgrade the install
-Change config files, adding dbus / alsa / wicd daemons.
-With a one line command, install all applications you need, and just grab a coffee or keep looking at your config files if you have more stuff to do.
-Eventually configure the wireless, if applicable.
And for a Mac OSX?
I have to wait for the intro to finish...
I have to enter my full name, address, useless stuff, pick a picture for my user (Which I couldn't care less about), etc...
And by the time I get on my empty desktop, I'll probably have had the time to finish with a full install, and then, with OSX you're going to have to visit various websites, download applications one by one, and install them all.
With linux, one line it is.
Oh, and dual booting is just not worth the time. I'd rather stay under windows all the time, or make a VM if I need it.
Endless Mike wrote:This is hilarious. Are you seriously saying changing config files is somehow easier than typing your name and address? Really?
And as noted, OS X has had the App Store (with plenty of free software) since 10.6.6.even if it's lacking something specific, downloading and installing software is a simple drag and drop operation. But there's a thread for this, anyway.
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