Chromebooks Outsell Macs For the First Time In the US (theverge.com) 177
An anonymous reader shares a report on The Verge: Google's low-cost Chromebooks outsold Apple's range of Macs for the first time in the U.S. recently. IDC analyst Linn Huang confirmed the milestone to The Verge. "Chrome OS overtook Mac OS in the US in terms of shipments for the first time in 1Q16," says Huang. "Chromebooks are still largely a US K-12 story." IDC estimates Apple's U.S. Mac shipments to be around 1.76 million in the latest quarter, meaning Dell, HP, and Lenovo sold nearly 2 million Chromebooks in Q1 combined. Chromebooks have been extremely popular in US schools, and it's clear from IDC's comments the demand is driving US shipments. Outside of the US, it's still unclear exactly how well Google's low-cost laptops are doing. Most data from market research firms like IDC and Gartner focuses solely on Google's wins in the US.
Chromebook is great (Score:5, Insightful)
The low cost with touch screen tells me all the other laptops are extremely marked up. My only disappointment is the lack of apps for it. But for simple Google Docs work, it can't be beat for the dollar.
Re:Chromebook is great (Score:5, Informative)
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So pretty much everything, the exception being when Uncle Sam is buying something that blows brown people up. Or is supposed to, if it's not raining or if they're the other side of the international date line.
Re:Chromebook is great (Score:4, Insightful)
A large part of the higher price of laptops are due to the last two. Based on what ARM SoCs cost (about $5-$15), Intel's markup on its CPUs is several hundred dollars. And we all know what Windows costs. Those two markups come out to about $200-$300. Add in $35 for a HDD and that's pretty much the price difference between Chromebooks and low-end laptops.
So no, laptops aren't marked up. Intel and Microsoft just make out like bandits from each laptop sale (just Intel for Macs).
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RAM: you can get 4GB Chromebooks if you want them.
Sure you can. And that adds about 25% to the price of the same model with 2GB.
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How do the prices compare for a similar spec MacBook Pro? I was under the impression that MacBooks were more expensive, but to be honest I hadn't really considered running Linux on a Mac. I might consider that in future.
Well, MacBook Pros are more of a "computer" than the Pixel2; but if you want to compare the 13" MacBook Pro to the almost 13" Pixel2, the MacBook Pro with 8 GB RAM is the same price as the 16 GB Pixel2 ($1299); but the big difference comes in local Storage. The Pixel2 tops out at 64 GB of SSD (I have 2X that in my iPhone). I know, I know. You're supposed to use the Cloud for all storage (so Google can quietly sift through all your files!); whereas the 13" MBP [apple.com] has double the local storage (128 GB) at minimum
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I don't mean to reply to my own comment; but Apple still sells the "non-Retina" MacBook Pros (which also still have DVD burners in them!) (and REPLACEABLE RAM!), and a choice of SSD or Spinning-Rust Drives up to 1TB (for an extra $50) (and they're easily replaceable, too!) for a STEAL! $1099 for the 13 inch.
Yeah, the display resolution kinda sucks compared with the Pixel2; but when you are not on the go, hook up an external monitor and rock-out with up to 2560 x 1600 (in addition to th
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I did say initially try out ChromeOs and u
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You need help, try the procedure at the end- from the BOFH.
"Macs. Stacks of them!"
"Macs?"
"Apple Mac 'computers'."
"And?"
"He was a MAC USER!" the PFY said. "For years he'd been living a lie!"
"I don't see..."
"He was a MAC USER!" I say. "I mean it's bad enough being an Apple user, but Macs as well! He'd been at it for years, too. When they broke into his basement they found Power Macs, Quadras... They even found... a Lisa."
"No!" the PFY gasps.
"It's true!" I say. "And it was still warm!"
"So he wasn't just experi
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Intel didn't kill of the entire Atom line - just the low end (low margin) chips designed to go in phones.
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Printing and scanning in particular under Linux have progressed but are still not "Grandma easy" to set up.
In most cases, you don't actually set it up. The distro sets it up automatically for you when you plug the printer in. You don't have to "do" anything.
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Not to sound like a Mac Fanboy. But the difference may be between the quality of parts use not just the specs that the parts have.
Back in the late 1990's during the Mhz race, Cheap PC's came out with Intel Pentium Centrino chips vs. the full Pentium chips. They were rated at the same Mhz, however their lower quality often created computers that barely functioned, or ran spastic.
Apples biggest problem is lack of low end systems. Everything needs to be thin, shiny and appear state of the art. That level of
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their lower quality often created computers that barely functioned, or ran spastic.
Are you saying Celerons were defective parts?
Re: Dafuq? (Score:2)
Pretty sure the poster meant the Celeron:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]
Re: Chromebook is great (Score:5, Insightful)
Come now. Anyone with an Internet connection is ALREADY brainwashed vis a vis Google. Except for us curmudgeons, the vast majority of the planet thinks that the Internet IS some unholy amalgamation of Google and Facebook.
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You mean the same way you forgot to include both Safari and Opera in your browsers list?
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Safari is the browser on all systems made by Apple: Mac, iPhone, iPad and iPod touch.
Re: Chromebook is great (Score:5, Funny)
It's a website where you go to google stuff.
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Dunno. I'll help us out, here:
https://www.google.com/#q=Bing [google.com]
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That's the sound the microwave makes when the burritos are done!
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Depending on the topic, you will get better results on Bing.
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Being someone who deploys chrome books daily I can tell you that you are dead wrong. They systems were designed for different use cases- if you want one OS on all devices go with windows 10- remind me again how well that is working out.
Its not a fondleslab, its a laptop with a simple OS that is virus free, malware free and constantly up to date.
Pointer devices need a high density UI, touch devices need a low density UI.... CompSci101
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I really like how you left Windows Phone out of the mix there. As someone who currently has a Windows 10 phone and a tablet that runs Windows 10 I think you are being over optimistic. I remember one of the big selling points with Windows 8.x on tablets was the ability to have the desktop on your tablet. When my tablet was running Windows 8.x and it would switch over to the desktop, it would absolutely infuriate me. I wanted the metro interface on my tablet and my desktop on my desktop computer and laptop. A
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Re: Chromebook is great (Score:5, Informative)
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> Having a small number of options (just as Apple products do) makes consumers very aware of the time in the cycle of their product, so wait for release before buying.
Actually, I just picked up a MacBook Pro last month because I **need** a nVidia GPU for CUDA work. (Current MBP's use an ATI GPU; there is no gurantee Apple will switch back to nVidia.) I wouldn't change a single thing -- the # of ports are perfect -- except swap out the ancient nVida 750M for a more modern GPU. Thankfully we have also a
Re: Chromebook is great (Score:2)
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The comparison should be to iOS tablets, not Mac.
These are two kinds of laptop offering different models for usage and monetization, the comparison highlights that Google's method is gaining in popularity. Obviously you're not interested in that but that doesn't mean the comparison is invalid.
And outsold Mac's in units? Dollars? Please.
"... in terms of shipments ..." so yes, units. Dollars are not even relevant in this context because most of the profit from ChromeOS is not from selling the product but from monetizing the services.
This means nothing. Isolate the Mac business from Apple, and the Chromebook business from Google, which business would you rather own?
I'm not sure what you mean by the "Chromebook business from Google"
Makes Sense (Score:4, Informative)
If all one needs to do is surf the Web, handle minor photo and video editing, then a Chromebook is ideal. A full-blown Mac is a complete waste of money. I'm in IT and manage everything from email servers to Wi-Fi, and now, thanks to modern computing and VPNs, can do everything from a Chromebook or actually, just any browser.
I like Chromebook because they are simple, inexpensive, and are harbingers of what's to come--namely, all of our comings and goings will be on the Web.
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I like Chromebook because they are simple, inexpensive, and are harbingers of what's to come--namely, all of our comings and goings will be on the Web.
All your base are belong to us.
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I like Chromebook because they are simple, inexpensive, and are harbingers of what's to come--namely, all of our comings and goings will be on the Web.
IOW it's a Network Computer.
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I'm about to replace my Macbook Air (which has become progressively worse with each OSX update) with a Chromebook. Faster, cheaper. I don't need any of the installed Mac software and I'm tired of the toy UI.
Considering you obvious Flamebait for a moment:
I assume you got a first generation MacBook Air, right?. Let's see, that came out in January, 2008. Yes, computer speed increases are not coming at quite the pace they once were; but I would HOPE that a Chromebook designed in 2014 (likely) would beat an MBA that was designed in 2006 (likely).
Interesting that you seem to be having worse performance with each OS X update. Last week, a friend of mine that has a single CPU first generation Mac Pro (circa 2007,
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I have a 2010 Macbook Air.
Performance did get worse with each update of OSX and I was told that El Capitan would be better but I didn't notice an improvement. Lately, Chrome has been burning up the machine which goes to 100% and full fans when opening more than a few tabs... some weird stuff there so I switched back to Firefox.
My UI comments are in comparison to Linux (I haven't used Windows for 15 years). My reference to toy UI refers specifically to the "skeumorphic" UI which I find childish and counterpr
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I have a 2010 Macbook Air. Performance did get worse with each update of OSX and I was told that El Capitan would be better but I didn't notice an improvement. Lately, Chrome has been burning up the machine which goes to 100% and full fans when opening more than a few tabs... some weird stuff there so I switched back to Firefox. My UI comments are in comparison to Linux (I haven't used Windows for 15 years). My reference to toy UI refers specifically to the "skeumorphic" UI which I find childish and counterproductive.
Now I KNOW you're lying!
For the last two or three major revs., OS X has almost completely removed the skeumorphic and "lickable" 3-D-ish design elements. In fact, Scott Forrestal was basically fired over the design war between his love of skeumorphic UI and Jonny Ive's love of "minimalism". Ive won. So, unless you are talking about certain design elements in Logic Pro, you will be hard pressed to find many skeumorphic applications in El Capitain.
I did enjoy Spotlight at first but for some reason later updates to it have made it almost useless. I used iMovie occasionally but, again updates made it confusing and difficult. I avoid iTunes like the plague but it (and iCloud) keep intruding.
You aren't very smart, are you?
Spotlight has actually gott
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Thank you for these tips on making my Mac less obnoxious. It's also reassuring that you don't think I need to replace it.
While I do appreciate your suggestions, I do think that you need to work on your mentoring style. It seems more appropriate to the Marines than us more gentle civilians. Perhaps if you were less strident people might like you better.
LOL! I DO apologize for my "strident" (I would say more like "spastic"!) "mentoring" style! I'm really NOT like that!!!
But I am glad you saw through my drubbing to extract the few nuggets of information I provided in amongst the un-called-for insults!
Sometimes, after battling with some truly uncivilized Anonymous Cowards on here, I tend to get "trigger-happy".
Again, please accept my apologies, and if you have any further questions, please let me know. I promise not to bite off your head and sh** down
What a strange comparison (Score:4, Interesting)
So.... Chromebooks are selling like gangbusters to a demographic that is very likely to smash their devices, and it's easier to replace a $200 computer than a $2000 one? Holy crap, stop the presses!
Is it really so hard for Verge to maintain readership, that they need to do ridiculous name drops just to get attention?
Want to know what I *really* want to see? School boards finally realizing that blindly throwing technology at a problem isn't going to result in better outcomes. First iPads, now Chromebooks. They continue to increase the burden of already razor thin IT staff, and I have yet to see one single study indicating that education quality and grades have improved.
Re:What a strange comparison (Score:4, Informative)
I don't know if you're old enough to remember when Apple ruled the education market at all levels. I had the CFO of Apple tell me straight to my face that the "bite" out of the Apple logo represented their undying commitment to education.
Now, they're committed to the hipster-at-Starbucks market who will soon run out of their parents' money to buy new Apple products.
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I don't know if you're old enough to remember when Apple ruled the education market at all levels. I had the CFO of Apple tell me straight to my face that the "bite" out of the Apple logo represented their undying commitment to education.
Then he (or you) made that up out of whole cloth.
The Bite (byte) out of the Apple was originally to let people more easily recognize the image as an Apple, rather than a Cherry.
Here's the REAL story [tribune.com.pk].
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I don't know why this unnamed CFO for Apple lied to you. Was it Oppenheimer. He's so Zany.
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It actually did. This would have been the late '90s, when Apple had products like the early powerbooks and Newton and the beige G3s. I was faculty at a prestigious university and Apple was so into the education market that they flew certain "opinion leaders" (I happened to be on the technology oversight committee) and our CIO to Cupertino for a week to get a tour of the campus and to get wined and dined and fed bad pastries and good coffee. The CFO of Apple took us out to dinner to te
Re:What a strange comparison (Score:5, Informative)
I have spent several years as an IT guy in school districts. Chromebooks make sense for IT for several reasons:
1. Replacing a Chromebook is trivial and inexpensive; there is no loss of data or backup worries.
2. The malware worry is not there.
3. Everything in modern schools is largely Web-based instruction or taught on SMART boards.
4. Kids like them and are already Google savvy.
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5. They have a keyboard.
My wife's a teacher. She showed me the garbage that the iPad crowd had to deal with. Her school over the past few years went from nothing to iPads for everyone, and now to small laptops (not Chromebooks) for everyone. The iPad generation were a group which made it through school without the ability to draw graphs, write equations, or create science assignments on their school funded device due to the simple lack of the ability to type anything accept a few characters and symbols.
This
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Downside is, you can only use web apps. Suppose a kid wants to use the excellent Krita and learn some real painting skills, just to name one.
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Downside is, you can only use web apps. Suppose a kid wants to use the excellent Krita and learn some real painting skills, just to name one.
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/sumo-paint/dpgjihldbpodlmnjolekemlfbcajnmod?hl=en
Disclaimer, I haven't used it, and it's been a while since I use Krita, so I'm not sure I could accurately compare if I had. The feature list looks pretty impressive. But the point is there's no reason you can't have a perfectly-functional Chrome app for painting. This is just the first hit on a search for "web painting app". There are others.
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I have spent several years as an IT guy in school districts. Chromebooks make sense for IT for several reasons:
If I had mod points, I would +1 you.
I worked in higher ed for 17 years (I recently moved to a new career path) and over the last several years we were starting to deploy more Chromebooks to users. We were a Google Apps for Education campus. Chromebooks just made a lot of sense. I didn't have to worry about the device getting lost or stolen. The device is encrypted by user - but there's a limited opportunity to download stuff to the Chromebook anyway. By default, everything runs in "The Cloud."
Most of our st
Re:What a strange comparison (Score:5, Interesting)
A neighboring school system, with more money than sense, did go all MacBook Airs. They are now getting rid of them, and going the Chromebook route. Easier to manage, no malware, and cheaper to replace.
We see them as just another tool. No different than a textbook or other material. They provide access to resources. It's still up to the teachers to use the tools they're given in the most effective way.
re: Macbook Air (Score:3)
Yeah.... makes perfect sense. One thing even my own daughter noticed in middle school though is, all Chromebooks are far from equal. One district she attended school in for a while had really flimsy, cheap Chromebooks that were often breaking down. Another had very nice, solid feeling variants. The main difference between those districts was the tax base in each. The wealthier district had the higher-end Chromebooks in use.
With a Macbook Air, at least you know pretty much what you're getting. Very arguabl
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So.... Chromebooks are selling like gangbusters to a demographic that is very likely to smash their devices, and it's easier to replace a $200 computer than a $2000 one? Holy crap, stop the presses!
Is it really so hard for Verge to maintain readership, that they need to do ridiculous name drops just to get attention?
Want to know what I *really* want to see? School boards finally realizing that blindly throwing technology at a problem isn't going to result in better outcomes. First iPads, now Chromebooks. They continue to increase the burden of already razor thin IT staff, and I have yet to see one single study indicating that education quality and grades have improved.
The criteria for selection isn't just cheap and replaceable. The basic required functionality needs to be there, and the cost and ease of implementation of the system needs to be considered as well. I-Pads were a ridiculous choice from the start, but populism took hold in some places before reason did.
My kids use Chromebooks at school. They don't enhance the basic educational foundation, but they are useful tools to help implement it. They use them for research, making presentations, turning in some home
Re:What a strange comparison (Score:4, Interesting)
First iPads, now Chromebooks. They continue to increase the burden of already razor thin IT staff, and I have yet to see one single study indicating that education quality and grades have improved.
Actually, going from iPads to Chromebooks is an excellent way to decrease the burden on IT - the entire environment on the Chromebook is set and maintained online, and everyone gets his or hers based on their credentials. A Chromebook is a smart terminal par excellance.
Re:What a strange comparison (Score:5, Insightful)
The iPads in education were probably a kickback scam. The Chromebooks actually seem useful. A part of my nephew's homework is found online (I suppose it could be made into an interactive program, but a website allows easier control of distribution and updates). More work for IT, a lot less work for teachers and parents. They cost about 1/3 to 1/2 what an iPad does. And the lack of a store discourages kids from trying to hack it to install Angry Birds. Course they can browse to all sorts of websites (Google needs to improve the parental controls - you can eventually restrict it, but the process isn't trivial), but they can also do that on a tablet's browser.
If you think about it, Chromebooks have more or less accomplished what OLPC set out to do - driven the price of a production computer through the floor so that even people in developing countries could afford one. OLPC's actual production cost was about $490 each. (And please, no ranting about 16 GB of flash being "limiting." My first computer had 32 kB of RAM, my first laptop had a 20 MB HDD. 16 GB is enormous. OLPC only had 4-8 GB of flash storage. A compressed version of Wikipedia [wikipedia.org] is 12 GB.)
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You have your head firmly on your shoulders, what on Earth are you doing here? :)
But seriously, as much as I like Apple devices, the remote management on OS X isn't all there, iOS without a keyboard is limiting, and an integrated Google ecosystem helps. These could have been some Windows RT devices, too, with an Azure-based domain, but IMHO MS's online management tools are clunkier than Google's.
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Microsoft laughed at them too, I distinctly remember Balmer saying something like this is a product with no market.
And please don't forget one of the prime tenets of computing in schools. When kids grow up they will use the computers and software they grew up using. It's the reason both Microsoft and Apple (this was a major apple philosophy) practically gave their products away to schools.
I urge you to keep laughing at Chromebooks, in 20 years when 1 of every 2 laptops is a Chromebook you can have a good so
Chromebooks are great. (Score:4, Informative)
They are cheap as hell, last forever on their batteries, and for end-users are effectively immune to malware, adware, and all the other horrible shit that makes your grandmother unable that piece of shit windows laptop. (And it's always a piece of shit windows laptop. What is it about grandmothers and their abilty to buy the very worst laptop ever made?)
And when you have physical access it's easy to put them in developer mode (Which will securely wipe any existing userdata, by design). Then you can get a root shell and install whatever OSS toys you want.
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FTFY.
After all, what do students or grandmothers need with privacy, anyway, right?
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Pretty much same reason I never considered an iPad (Score:2)
Probably good for elders too (Score:2)
Currently, my mom doesn't have a computer. She's happy to have me do any online stuff that she wants done. But if she ever decides she wants her own computer, I would NOT recommend a Windows box, or even a Mac. I suspect she'd be more comfortable with a keyboard than a touchscreen, so that means a Chromebook. Easier for her than a Windows machine, and MUCH easier for me to support.
Comparing Apples to Oranges... (Score:2)
pardon the pun. But a Chromebook is nothing near a Macbook. Chromebooks have very little in the way of memory and storage. The $200 versions have terrible screens. The utility, when not connected to the internet, is quite limited. The Macbook is a full fledged workstation.
I'm not saying that it's a bad choice for schools who are putting them in the hands of teenagers that have yet to develop, shall we say, a sense of responsibility.
Probably a fairer comparison would be to the Surface but even then the Surfa
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pardon the pun. But a Chromebook is nothing near a Macbook. Chromebooks have very little in the way of memory and storage. The $200 versions have terrible screens. The utility, when not connected to the internet, is quite limited. The Macbook is a full fledged workstation.
I'm not saying that it's a bad choice for schools who are putting them in the hands of teenagers that have yet to develop, shall we say, a sense of responsibility.
Probably a fairer comparison would be to the Surface but even then the Surface has a lot more going for it than a Chromebook. The Chromebook is a low end internet appliance. For very basic tasks its great. Which is to say, for most students it is just fine. But to compare a Chromebook to a Macbook is like comparing a Chevy to a Ferrari.
It's a Netbook. Nothing more; somewhat less, actually.
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They are very different beasts and the move from one to the other can show a wider consumer trend, just like how there are very few feature phones on the market these days. The rise of the low-end and drop of the high end when purchasing trends are considered across a common demographic is indeed an apples to apples comparison. It is quite believable that Chromebooks are directly offsetting the Macbook figures, especially when you consider that few people every actually needed the power of a Macbook pro, an
Not to worry (Score:2)
Not the first time... (Score:2)
It's not the first time. We had this discussion years ago...
In 2013...
http://www.ibtimes.com/googles... [ibtimes.com]
A year later they outsell the iPad in schools...
http://www.businessinsider.com... [businessinsider.com]
Chromebooks still need local USB printing (Score:2)
Perfect for the family (Score:2)
As a former IT Tech, buying a Chromebook for my wife was one of the most liberating experiences ever. Not to mention she loves it for the simplicity too.
Chevy outsells Mercedes, too... (Score:2)
...doesn't mean Mercedes is in danger.
cheap things sell more than expensive things (Score:2)
I would have thought this would be the case years ago, give the price disparity.
They're good for educational market (Score:2)
As I've discovered recently, there really is no better alternative for the educational market, and certainly not for middle school. Those kids are merciless when it comes to hardware and software, and they will most certainly fuck it up even if it's locked down tight. To give you an example, my kid has found a bug in Windows 7 whereby you could make Windows treat _any_ file (even *.exe) as if it was a text file and open it in Notepad. Laptop was locked down with administrative policy, so this is not somethi
DUH.... (Score:2)
Wow amazing a $199 product outsells a $999 to $1499 product?
ZOMG Apple is DYING!
Tomorrow on Slashdot, The Honda Civic is the worlds best Sports car because it outsells alone every single Ferrari model made.
Beginning another malware experiment? (Score:2)
For ages, there have been less problems with malware on Macs than on Windows PCs.
For ages, one main excuse for this has been "more people use Windows, so it's naturally a bigger target". Technical arguments about vulnerability are dismissed by people who make this argument.
OK, so now in Chromebook we have a new malware target which may be both bigger than the Mac market AND theoretically less vulnerable.
This could be amusing...
Re:Time to (Score:5, Insightful)
The Mac is not simply a PC. It's a PC with a soldered CPU and soldered RAM, sold at twice the price of an equivalent PC.
Sent from my 2010 Mac mini.
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... sold at twice the price of an equivalent PC.
Sorry, not true. I defy you to find a similarly built PC for any more than 5~10 percent less than a comparable Mac. I find that comparable computers run pretty much the same price.
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
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The whole "Macs are comparable to PCs" thing stopped being true like five years ago when Apple decided to forget that they were a computer company and concentrate on iDevices. Their current top-end computers are something like two generations behind the current latest-and-greatest, the graphics cards in their Macs are either the same two generation old Intel integrated graphics or even older AMD or Nvidia GPUs, depending on model.
So, yeah - it's trivial to beat a Mac these days, because Apple has entirely s
that's dishonest (Score:2)
of course you can build a PC from parts for much less than a prebuilt machine such as a mac. ho hum. companies assemble components and mark finished items up for profit, news at eleven.
find me a PREBUILT computer, from a sizable vendor, with equivalent hardware AND EQUIVALENT BUILD QUALITY, that is significantly cheaper than a comparable mac. not as easy, eh?
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It's quite easy to build a PC for half the price as the low-entry Mac mini, which still has components which were already a bit out of date in 2014.
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Sent from my Mac that has user-replaceable RAM that isn't soldered in.
Your Mac [everymac.com] doesn't have soldered RAM. Though it's only officially upgradeable to 8GB, It's actually upgradeable to 16GB. I would know. I upgraded the RAM in both a 2009 Mac mini and a 2011 Mac mini. I also installed an SSD alongside the HDD in the 2011 one and was able to configure the two drives to act as a Fusion Drive [anandtech.com]. Between those upgrades and the discrete GPU (which is a feature that unfortunately hasn't shown up in any of subsequent models), it's kept chugging along like a champ.
Moreover, while it's t
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release OS X on the PC and just scrap the Mac altogether or spin the hardware business off as a separate company/subsidiary and also release OS X to the PC.. (Because there is nothing unique about a Mac anymore, it's just a PC with a DRM lock)
Michael Dell, is that you?
Why don't you just sign on and fight like a man...
BTW, the ONLY "DRM Lock" in OS X is a file that says "Please Don't Copy OS X". I believe the Installer looks for that; but other than that, Apple has NEVER used TPM or anything else to "lock" OS X to Apple Hardware. They had a TPM chip on the first Intel Mac mobos; but they never implemented a driver for it, and soon removed it altogether.
Truth be told, as long as it doesn't get ridiculous, Apple is actually more-than-happy th
Re:And in other news, Chevys Outsell Mercedes... (Score:4, Funny)
Why is this even a story?
Why is this even a post?
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This is unadulterated Click-bait...
...that worked on you.
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This is unadulterated Click-bait...
...that worked on you.
And apparently you, too.
Your point being???
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... says the guy named "macs4all". lol. talk about a knee-jerk defensive post *sweating on his macbook with apple-phone/apple-pad/itv/iwatch next to him* "uh uh... [obligatory ad-hominem attack that doesn't address the facts presented]"
Um, I was typing that at Work on my work Win 7 laptop.
And, BTW, ad hominem attacks are the last-defense of the defense-less.
So, what about those facts? Got any FACTUAL rebuttal?
Oh, wait, you're an AC. Nevermind.
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You're not in much position to demand substantiation when you fling "CLICKBAIT." and walk off. In fact, it seems like the appropriate reaction IS to verbally doubt that's a neutral, objective claim, when it comes from a "macs4all". We really don't need to* do a federal fucking study to verbalize some doubt. Granted, GP wrote with the grace of a squid rolling downhill. *CITATION NEEDED
And you're STILL an ANONYMOUS COWARD, so STFU.
Re: (Score:2)
UNIX certification assures compliance with a particular standard API. That API is obsolete, and it never guaranteed robustness anyway.
LOL!
Better not tell Linux, BSD, etc. that the POSIX API is Obsolete.
Re: (Score:2)
if you peek under the hood at OS X, it is VASTLY more robust than ChromeOS, being a Certified UNIX and all
Ha ha ha, you're quite the joker. No Unix tool in better on OS/x than Linux and most are crappier... way crappier. Valgrind? Yes, Real Unix[tm] has it, the catch is, it doesn't work. The list of similar farces is long. Face it, these days Real Unix[tm] gets the sloppy seconds from Linux, it's been that way for, oh I don't know, 15 years now? More?
Now, go to a BSD forum and post that. I'll wait...
Re:stock price (Score:4, Insightful)
Consider the source. This is the same IDC that announced US Mac sales suffered a 1.7% slump when they had actually grown 18% [appleinsider.com] not too long ago. Granted, that was an extreme outlier, but it bears repeating that estimates don't always match reality, particularly when it comes to IDC, since they have an established and documented history of publishing reports that flatter their clients while downplaying the competition. The link above gives details on a number of other irregularities in IDC's data and methodology over the years prior to the incident I cited, such as millions of unverified sales from "other" vendors appearing out of thin air to suppress market share growth in the competition and their history of double-dipping by finding ways to count their clients' products in more than one category while inventing reasons why the competing products are only counted in one category.
Even with all of that said, however, I do expect that the numbers aren't too far off one way or the other, given that Apple itself posted a YOY decline in Mac sales and have had either nonexistent or lackluster updates to their Mac lines so far this year (e.g. only the MacBook has gotten a minor speed bump, whereas the MacBook Pro and MacBook Air haven't gotten their usual updates by now, though that may indicate more significant improvements at WWDC next month).
Re: (Score:2)
Yes I am sure Apple will collapse because $200 computers with margins between -20% and 2% may be outselling the Mac.
Re: (Score:2)
So, tell me, where's that keyboard on your fondleslab?
I thought so.
Why, right HERE [apple.com], of course...
Re: (Score:2)
Macs still outsell Zunes.