[AT] OT - Windows XP - Thanks
charlie hill
charliehill at embarqmail.com
Sat Mar 22 14:33:41 PDT 2014
John, I don't think your comments contradict what I said to any degree and
I
agree with you that the entire market/technology is changing rapidly. Just
this morning I saw an ad for an Android powered personal computer.
It comes with no monitor or keyboard. It's just a little case about the
size of
a notebook computer hard drive. It uses most any kind of monitor available
and USB or Bluetooth keyboards. Cost....... $89.00.
I am an appraiser and it has only been in the last 10 years or so (if that
long)
that there was any sort of serious appraisal software written for MAC.
It just wasn't MAC's market and they didn't care about it until market
demand
drove them to it. It was only when MAC's were adapted to run Windows that
appraisal software was available for MAC. Even today, almost all appraisers
run MS based computers, notebooks or tablets.
Your reply seemed to imply that I was attacking MAC and I made it clear that
I was not.
I was merely defending Microsoft. I've been using Microsoft products since
the days of
DOS and I've never directly paid them one red cent. On the other hand I've
never been
forced to buy a computer from them so that I could run their software
either.
Charlie
-----Original Message-----
From: John Slavin
Sent: Saturday, March 22, 2014 2:05 PM
To: AT at lists.antique-tractor.com
Subject: Re: [AT] OT - Windows XP - Thanks
> I'm not a MAC hater
> either but they are designed for graphics applications.
>
> Charlie
Hmm. Back in 1984 or so when the Mac was introduced, you could certainly
say that because the alternative was DOS which was text based. I've tried
to stay out of this discussion, but I guess I've reached my breaking point.
I'd say now that every piece of software is designed for graphics
applications in one way or another. While it might be correct to say that
some "specialized" software is not put on the Mac, that doesn't apply to
most of us. An awful lot of business, uses Microsoft Office and Excel.
There have been Mac versions of those for years. So most businesses will run
fine on Macs. Even the suite that Apple makes, Pages and Numbers import and
export to Office and Excel files. In my law practice I've used Pages and
Numbers and not the real MS Office suite and interact with Windows users
daily.
Moreover, you can't just limit the numbers of Apple computers to Mac
machines. There is major shift underway where a lot of functions are
transitioning to handheld devices, including tablets and phones. Make no
mistake, these ARE computers and in total, they outsell MS computers. Apple
devices alone, are expected to outsell Windows devices this year. I run
trials from my iPad nearly every day and don't even take a traditional
computer. I have pictures and exhibits in software designed for the iPad
for use exclusively in trials. I present them through Airplay to an AppleTV
connected to a large screen TV or projector. I would say 2/3 or more of the
attorneys in my town do just that. I have a database on my ipad that syncs
to my office computer. I annotate recents cases so that the summaries are
at my fingertips.
There is another alternative that's afoot right now too. Google has the
chrome web brower and quite a bit of stuff is running through their browser.
Most significantly is Google Docs, another alternative to the MS Suite.
Everything is run through the cloud. And chromebooks are cheap.
Even Apple has a similar alternative to cloud based computing. If you have
any Apple device, as a result, you to have an Apple ID. With that AppleID,
you can access icloud and run Apple's suite of Pages, Numbers, Keynote,
right within your web browser. You can do that on any machine with a web
brower, including Windows machines and chromebooks. Any document you create
can be exported directly to Microsoft word versions.
And even the specialized software market has changed. At one time, in order
to do research I had to use a Windows emulator on my mac because the cases
would come monthly on a CD that would only run on a Windows machine with
proprietary Windows sofware. ALL research now is done online through a web
browser. It's totally machine agnostic. And that's true of the vast
majority of legal tools. In fact, I can't think of a single resource that
would require a Windows machine.
I frankly don't see how MS can maintain it's current model. Apple's OS is
now free. Google OS is free. I just read the other day that the rumor is
that MS is going to release a cheap version of their OS, and they just a few
weeks ago released a cheap version for cheap machine OEMs. Moreoever, an
awful lot of the software development is occurring in the iOS and Android
sphrere. I predict that at some point in the near future, MS operating
system model is going to collapse. Undoubtably, they will remain strong in
the server OS business and in business services, and for the forseeable
future in Office suite business (although that's under attack). It would
not surprise me if in the near future nearly all personal devices run on
Android, iOS/Mac or some flavor of Linux.
John
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