on 8/15/02 2:22 AM, Patrick Finnegan at pat(a)purdueriots.com wrote:
On Thu, 15 Aug 2002, Owen Robertson wrote:
on 8/14/02 4:47 PM, Will Jennings at
xds_sigma7(a)hotmail.com wrote:
Who says a PC is a computer? It's just an
Intel marketing gimmick... From my
experiences doing tech support, I shudder to imagine the general populace
using real computers... And macs are OK if you run Be on them.
I run Be on a crappy Intel system. Be is a good OS, but not very useful.
Thank you thank you THANK YOU Steve for telling them NOT to buy Be!!!
Anyway, I prefer going months without a crash with Mac OS X (10.1) than
having post 95 versions of Windows crash every couple of hours.
Plus I like being able to run text-based UNIX programs, X based apps,
Windows programs, Mac OS Classic, and Mac OS X programs, all on the screen
at the same time, and all of them feeling pretty snappy. On a G4, anyway.
Wouldn't try it on a G3. Would any PC users out there like to take the
Photoshop benchmark test against my 800Mhz TiBook? Hmm... Anyone? :-)
Assuming that Photoshop for the PC is dual-proc capable, I'm sure my Dual
1.466GHz athlon could beat it hands-down. Maybe I just have too much
faith or just know how crappy the PowerPC Price/Performance ratio really
is.
But you're overlooking one important thing here. Photoshop is optimized for
AltiVec (Velocity Engine, as Apple calls it). That gives it a tremendous
speed boost on G4 systems. And if you run it on a dual processor G4, it
really screams. No matter how many platforms Adobe ports it to, Photoshop
is, and will always be a Mac application. Processor performance and
everything else aside, Photoshop is deisgned from the ground up for the Mac,
and adapted to run on Windows.
Who has a copy of the benchmark?
Oh it's easy to come buy. Apple uses it frequently to promote the G4. Mac
publications, Adobe, etc, all use it. According to MacAddict:
A 2-pixel Gaussian Blur, using a 95MB image, with Photoshop 7 and Mac OS X
on an 800Mhz TiBook (Titanium PowerBook G4) takes 14 seconds.
Not bad for a portable. But even if you system outperforms mine, which being
DP it might, mine is much more stable, and looks infinitely cooler. :-)
--
Owen Robertson