- Oct 20, 2004
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That was an awesome review. Thanks! Good information to have.Southern Cross said:Red,
I've used both Macs and decent Windows computers in my photography business. Right now, I have two fairly fast and well equipped PCs on my desk at the office. The faster of the two has a decent dual core processor, 4 Gigs of RAM, and a decent video card matched to a top end Samsung widescreen monitor. The slower PC is mainly for admin work instead of image processing, so it's not set up to work as quickly.
A PC can be used for about 95% of the work that a Mac is capable of when it comes to design work. So if you already have a decent PC, that should get you started.
BUT - you have the issue of cross platform (MAC OSX and Windows) software purchases. Many software packages will still run on only Mac or Windows, and are not set up to work with Mac's Intel Processors. Take Adobe Photoshop for instance. They're not going to produce a cross platform version of Photoshop until the next major version upgrade hits the market (every 3 years or so). A lot of software manufacturers will allow you to change current versions of software to a new platform for a minimal fee, so be sure to check before you buy. Design software can easily exceed the cost of a computer several times over.
My iMac G5 iView was a GREAT machine (I bought it just before the Intel chips hit the market). The screen resolution and display quality is probably the best I've used in 20" screens. But frankly, I just could not get used to the Mac way of doing things quickly enough, and I sold the machine after only 3-4 months of light use. HOWEVER, my next system will be a Mac set up to run Windows. The G5 is portable enough to bring onsite for client work or run on rolling carts in my studio shooting area, and I can run my cameras right from the computer using pecific software on commercial shoots. So I'll probably be buying a G5 with a 17" screen, or POSSIBLY a Mac Laptop.
I don't think you can go wrong with a Mac either way. But please do yourself a favor and buy one with a Core Duo processor and max out the RAM. It's a minor and affordable upgrade that even a technodolt like myself can do and the ability to run two memory hogging applications at the same time is a huge timesaver when you get into the design profession. And DON'T buy your RAM from Apple - it's WAAAAY overpriced. Buy matching RAM from Newegg (Samsung is the OEM manufacturer for Mac), so for under $200, you can do a major RAM uprade.
I would also suggest NOT upgrading the hard drive through Mac. Again, you are better off purchasing a stand alone hard drive for extra storage.
Mac's Apple Care is a great deal as far as I'm concerned.
Finally, if you get into the design world, any competent professional really needs to know how to speak Mac inside and out. I interact with everything from magazine design pros and art diretors to ad agancy execs and they're all using Macs for their art and design work. I cannot remember the last major client that was using PCs unless it was just for office admin tasks (secretaries, accountants etc.).
Chris
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