Linked by moondevil on Wed 11th Jul 2012 22:49 UTC
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RE[2]: I was thinking about purchasing a Mac, this changed my
by moondevil on Thu 12th Jul 2012 17:47
in reply to "RE: I was thinking about purchasing a Mac, this changed my "
You do realise that you can keep using Mac OS X Lion after Mountain Lion is released - your computer isn't going to spontaneously combust into a giant fireball.
No, but it means that if you want to target Mountain Lion, or take advantage of the new goodies in Objective-C you are forced to buy new hardware.
For many companies this is a big problem.
RE[2]: I was thinking about purchasing a Mac, this changed my
by corbintechboy on Thu 12th Jul 2012 18:21
in reply to "RE: I was thinking about purchasing a Mac, this changed my "




Member since:
2005-07-06
Tech does not move near as fast as it at one time did. This means the useful years of a system are extended beyond the usual time they used to be useful machines.
I have a old 3000+ with 1.5gigs of ram that is still a fast machine for basic applications and even faster then some systems built today (netbook for example). Yet I can hook up that machine and install XP and get all my drivers from Windows update and be on the road with a modern browser and security updates. And this in on a 12yo OS. I have even had Windows 7 running on that machine without issue and I think I got that machine in 2003-04 or somewhere around that time.
So, a 1400$ machine (give or take) that is still fast today but only has a six year lifespan because the proprietary Gods say so? You Apple just lost a customer!
You do realise that you can keep using Mac OS X Lion after Mountain Lion is released - your computer isn't going to spontaneously combust into a giant fireball.