Hyperspeed wrote:
There's been a lot of questions lately such as "What makes an Amiga what it is?" and the answers have ranged from Workbench to the custom chips.
Since Apple Macintosh has been supported by Microsoft with Word etc. and Microsoft/Gates has shares in Apple... and Intel now make the CPUs...
Could someone tell me what the hell makes a Mac?
Inventive enclosure designs (I've not used a more robust laptop) and the best consumer grade Unix operating system available.
I've tried MacOS 7.5.5 on Shapeshifter and it seemed like AtariTOS. I imagine it being used with a 1-button mouse by an affected hairdresser.
I totally agree... MacOS pre OSX was worse than AtariTOS. I had to use MacOS9 on a ProTools system and from that moment I declared that I would never be a Mac owner. Then I got to try MacOS X (on PearPC) and started to fall in love with it!
Someone enlighten me what makes OSX special and why everyone is ecstatic about iBooks...
The one advantage that Windows has is the vast amount of comercial software support it has... It is that one thing that actually makes Windows "better" than all other OSes... As the second best comercially supported operating System, MacOS X takes second place... but MacOSX has things that Windows doesn't... like:
1) Total Hardware/Software integration, the OS designers know exactly what Hardware the OS is going to run on, and you can feel it... very similar to AmigaOS in that respect.
2) Proper user accounts, I can have separate accounts optimised and set up for different uses... these are totally secure and are essentially separate machines!
3) Not running the machine in Administrator mode, and requiring a password to access the system files keeps nasties out of the system.
4) The Audio subsystem has been logically thought out, to allow application independant effects and transparent distributed network audio, with very low latency... Windows audio sybsystem is a mess... Steinberg had to save the day with ASIO.
5) It has a title bar, with the menus at the top of the screen which I enjoy as I grew up with AmigaOS.
6) The File system is much better than FAT32... and bit better than NTFS, with a cool resource fork feature, based around special directories called bundles. This feature allows drag and drop installation, as we are used to with AmigaOS.
The list goes on...