mintymint
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I think it's being exaggerated how overpriced Apple's products are. They definitely cost more, but I don't think the price difference is that outrageous. That ad above is obviously meant to sell Kindle Fire HD tablets, so it's understandable that it makes them look like a hands down better deal. But I looked up some more specs and found that some advantages the iPad Mini has are a 25% faster processor, a more current and powerful graphics chip, a 5MP rear facing camera vs no rear facing camera on the Kindle, the Kindle is about 33% heavier and more bulky, and the iPad mini can take 1080p video vs 720p. And although they make a big deal about one being HD and one being SD, it's really only the difference between 1024x768 and 1280x800. I wouldn't call that an earth shattering resolution difference on a mini tablet of that size. So I don't think it's so clear cut in that example.9006 said:
Let me take the 15" Retina Macbook Pro as another example. The base configuration costs $2200. It has a 2880x1800 pixel screen, 256GB SSD, quad core third generation Intel Core i7, up to 7 hours of battery life, and a switchable integrated/dedicated GPU all in a package that weighs only 4.5 pounds and is 0.7" thick. These are important factors to me. Setting aside the more aesthetic design elements like the spiffy aluminum and glass construction, is there a PC laptop out there that equals these specs (no, I'm not just talking about raw processing power) for the same or lower price? I'm not sure there is, and it's been out for almost a year now. I definitely think there's something worthwhile being offered there. I would definitely want one just for the hardware and design, regardless of what OS I chose to run on it after I bought it.
I would hardly call any Unix-based OS "the same thing." Obviously which specific OS is chosen makes a huge difference for people's user experiences, not to mention all the different desktop environments/GUIs that can be chosen on top of that. Otherwise there wouldn't be so many different ones out there being developed. There's a lot more difference than "branding" between stuff like OSX, BSD and all the Linux distros out there. There are vastly differing user experiences.xaero said:Apple's operating systems are just proprietary Unix software. If you build a PC and install any Linux distro on it, you get the same thing. PCs also "just work," and "feels cool" is subjective and somewhat irrelevant. It's like the difference between two solid green t-shirts; one of the t-shirts has the Nike logo on it and the other one is plain. In the end they're both still green, but one costs more money because it has a logo on it. The difference in cost lies in the branding. It's the same with Apple products.
Windows definitely has the best support for the widest range of hardware, as well as the newest hardware including untold numbers of peripheral devices. I also find that the Windows versions of many cross-platform applications seem to be more polished.xaero said:This is not entirely true for computers and other electronic devices. An Apple computer and a PC both do the same thing. They both provide the same thing (although Windows based PCs have a much broader selection of applications, hardware, and software development options, as well as access to the latest hardware). Besides the user experience, the only difference between Apple products and competing products is aesthetics. Computer manufacturers like Dell, HP and Lenovo are starting to produce desktops and laptops with the same (if not better) build quality of Apple products. Apple is slowly but surely turning into a dying fad.
Yes, it's a lot more restricted. But I think one benefit to buying an iOS device over an Android device that's often overlooked is the updates and support of the OS. If you get an iOS device you can generally rely on receiving reliable and timely updates and improved versions of the OS for several years that come straight from Apple. With android devices, the burden rests on each manufacturer to take the latest version of Android and alter it according to their own specifications and hardware and then distribute that to the end user. It's a much slower process, and often results in hardware support being dropped much more quickly. So often times you end up getting slower OS updates for a shorter period of time, losing out on new features.Aihpames said:The iPad is such a locked down system, that I'd honestly feel restricted and constrained just by owning one. Android devices actually feel like they can be tailored more and more to the needs of the individual The priceerformance ratio is just a bonus, in my opinion.
Edit: All that said, I totally just bought an ASUS Transformer