Mercutio
Fatwah on Western Digital
I got a bunch of Mac stuff for our classrooms, including some iMacs, a couple Airport Extremes and some Macbook Pros and Macbook Airs.
OK fine. I have appropriated one of the 17" Macbooks for whatever I want a Macbook for, which honestly isn't a whole hell of a lot. This is my first real experience as a full time user of OSX on actual Apple hardware instead of Hackintoshes.
For a company that supposedly pays a great deal of attention to human factors, I'm not overly impressed with what I'm seeing on this thing.
First thing first: Glossy screen can lick the deepest, hairiest part of my butt. It's not horrible when it's plugged in, but under the fluorescent lights of my office, it looks cheap. This is a $2800 laptop. No part of it should look cheap.
Second thing: Apple's built in pointer isn't very good. It's not the worst one I've used; that honor goes to HP's recent consumer trash. But it requires actual effort to click. Clicking is not done absently. And only the part down at the bottom can be used to click at all. The whole touchpad can't be used to click. Bogus. It's almost like they want to drive people to an external pointer.
On the plus side, the gestures for things like scrolling are quite nice. I'm still learning them, but hopefully I'll see that on my next Thinkpad.
I'm not a big fan of chiclet style keyboards. The MBP's is nicer than other chiclet keyboards I've used. It's comfortable for typing and there's a good amount of key travel. I can tell when I've hit a key.
Third thing: The speakers are surprisingly nice. That's a minor thing, but I'm not used to getting that from the business notebooks I spend most of my time using. Good on Apple for that much at least. On the other hand, unlike Windows notebooks, Apple omits the numeric keypad, so there's all kinds of room for speakers.
Fourth thing: 17" is still too goddamn big for a notebook, even if this one is unusually light. It's bulky. I know the big MBP is supposed to be all things to all people, with a fast CPU, gobs of RAM and a decent GPU (Radeon Mobility 6770, nothing to sneeze at), but this guy isn't really comfortable to use anyplace but at a table and I'd rather have something I'm more comfortable with.
OSX is OSX, and that's its usual self. I'm fine with that. It starts quickly and resumes quickly. I'm installing City of Heroes, which does have a Mac-native client, in order to check graphics performance.
Unfortunately, I don't have a Windows-based i7 laptop to compare this thing to at the moment, but this guy is my de facto work-issued laptop, so I'll probably come back to bitch about this thing more later.
OK fine. I have appropriated one of the 17" Macbooks for whatever I want a Macbook for, which honestly isn't a whole hell of a lot. This is my first real experience as a full time user of OSX on actual Apple hardware instead of Hackintoshes.
For a company that supposedly pays a great deal of attention to human factors, I'm not overly impressed with what I'm seeing on this thing.
First thing first: Glossy screen can lick the deepest, hairiest part of my butt. It's not horrible when it's plugged in, but under the fluorescent lights of my office, it looks cheap. This is a $2800 laptop. No part of it should look cheap.
Second thing: Apple's built in pointer isn't very good. It's not the worst one I've used; that honor goes to HP's recent consumer trash. But it requires actual effort to click. Clicking is not done absently. And only the part down at the bottom can be used to click at all. The whole touchpad can't be used to click. Bogus. It's almost like they want to drive people to an external pointer.
On the plus side, the gestures for things like scrolling are quite nice. I'm still learning them, but hopefully I'll see that on my next Thinkpad.
I'm not a big fan of chiclet style keyboards. The MBP's is nicer than other chiclet keyboards I've used. It's comfortable for typing and there's a good amount of key travel. I can tell when I've hit a key.
Third thing: The speakers are surprisingly nice. That's a minor thing, but I'm not used to getting that from the business notebooks I spend most of my time using. Good on Apple for that much at least. On the other hand, unlike Windows notebooks, Apple omits the numeric keypad, so there's all kinds of room for speakers.
Fourth thing: 17" is still too goddamn big for a notebook, even if this one is unusually light. It's bulky. I know the big MBP is supposed to be all things to all people, with a fast CPU, gobs of RAM and a decent GPU (Radeon Mobility 6770, nothing to sneeze at), but this guy isn't really comfortable to use anyplace but at a table and I'd rather have something I'm more comfortable with.
OSX is OSX, and that's its usual self. I'm fine with that. It starts quickly and resumes quickly. I'm installing City of Heroes, which does have a Mac-native client, in order to check graphics performance.
Unfortunately, I don't have a Windows-based i7 laptop to compare this thing to at the moment, but this guy is my de facto work-issued laptop, so I'll probably come back to bitch about this thing more later.