So how do you roll. Android or Apple?
Android (Google)
iOS (Apple)
Other (?)
So how do you roll. Android or Apple?
"It is one thing to make a picture of what a person looks like, it is another thing to make a portrait of who they are" - Paul Caponigro
Constructive Critique of my photographs is always appreciated
Nikon, etc!
RICK
My Photography
Android is a truly horrible thing designed to do nothing other than spy on you and collect a huge database of information to sell. It doesn't even let you control the equipment you bought with your own money, and it sneaks apps you don't want back on again without your consent. For example, you can't edit or even read the HOSTS file. Zero privacy, terrible security, deliberate lock-in. I despise it.
IOS is the same as Android only more expensive, and with even less control. (Pay more, get less. How does that work?)
"Other" doesn't exist anymore, not in any practical way.
Last edited by paulheath; 30-05-2018 at 9:07pm.
My seven-year-old dumbphone died last week. I'm damned if I'll pay extra for an inferior product. That leaves Andriod. Which I despise. But it's the only game in town.
Apple for me. It was Windows and Android all my life up until about maybe four years ago when a mate at work could get me a Macbook Pro at a good price and I went in and it all snowballed from there. I've only had the Macbook Pro and Apple phones since then and wouldn't go back.
It's not that I think Apple is better... not at all. They're illogical and frustrating at times, but I'm a convert either way. Once you get used to it all, it generally works quite well... even if they're not as logical as the Windows/Android mob.
Interesting, isn't it. I use windows at home and have done so in all my past workplaces. My current workplace (been there 3 1/2 years) has Macs. I was really intrigued by how 'better' they were supposed to be compared to Windoze. Well they freeze up occasionally and need a restart, the same as PC. And everything I could do on a Windows PC I can do on the Macs. I really see no actual benefit of one over the other. Different menus, but really other than that, I could not say one system is better than the other. I do however, like that I can just open up a PC and put an extra HDD or SSD in, or add some extra ram. Much harder to make hardware changes to Macs. We recently had an SSD added to one of the Mac's at work. Cost about 2x the price of adding one the same size to a windows pc. The Mac had to be removed from the workplace and taken to the Apple Store to have this done (took 3 days to get the Mac back). If it was a windows pc, it could have been done in the workplace, in about 15 minutes. So on that alone, I would say Windows has a slight advantage. But otherwise, it is all rather ho-hum.. same old same old.
Last edited by ricktas; 31-05-2018 at 5:51am.
I tell you the single thing I miss the most, as inane as it seems.
Because I am constantly moving music and photos, I basically always had two windows open on my PCs, moving files from place to place.
Now, you can obviously still move stuff on a Mac (I much prefer to use Bridge compared to the horrible Finder) but it is nowhere near as simple and easy as just having two windows open and transferring with ease, as I did on the PC.
And in general, I still find it easier just to navigate a PC than I do my Mac.
Like I said, in time it all becomes familiar and you get used to it. But I definitely find the PC easier to use for the basic user of computers. Which is me.
All this said, the thing I am loving about the Mac is it’s speed. I don’t know if I just got unlucky, but every PC I ever owned, right up until the current day, just ends up slow. I don’t know if I just abused them too much, but you download a few programs, fill up a bit of space and everything just slows down.
Alternatively, I’ve had my Mac at capacity many times and it always runs at the same speed. Touch wood, but it’s just fast, all of the time. And that definitely suits me.
Like I said, I may just have been unlucky with my PCs, but I was unlucky for about 25 years with dozens of different computers.
My! You're nothing if not oft-quoth today, Tannin
Just to expand on your "...not in any practical way".
They may be unheard of, but here are 6 of at least 8 (and one I read about in APC magazine, if I can find it...)
And there's the LEAST known of them all: Windows! - an open-and-shut casement to be sure...
(But I agree with your tirade against the BIG 2.)
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PS: Did I forget to say ANDRID?
CC, Image editing OK.
I am on my third iPhone so that speaks for itself
I have lots of Apple Products, even a MacBook Pro and I hate it, so I bought a new laptop 18 months ago it has Win 10 in it and I hate that too.
Though I love my PC running Win7 64 bit its 5 years old now I had it built to what I wanted then, though have had to get a larger SSD put in and more RAM.
And that's what I like about PC's you can do some of that yourself and your labour is FREE..
They mostly do the same things and any/most advantages that one has over the other is only temporary since it's so competitive these days.
So I'm an Apple user but for no other reason than I can't be bothered switching and relearning things. In my experience things tend to just work in the apple ecosystem, until they don't. In which case there is NO WAY around it, you're basically stuck. Luckily my IT demands are not very high.
Nikon FX + m43
davophoto.wordpress.com
Don’t quite get Geoff’s difficulty moving files on a Mac. Open two finder windows and drag from one to the other.
can’t do it on an iPhone unfortunately.
Right click on Finder and choose “New Finder Window”
Linux OS as an alternative to Win or Apple?
Barry
D7200 & D5600
The command key replaces the ctrl key. So copy cut and paste are command-C/X/V
In Finder, all the shortcuts are listed when you go into File, Edit, View etc. on the top menu bar.
Eg. A new finder window is Command-N when you're in finder or command-T for a new tab in the same finder window.
What do you mean by thumbnails? In the finder View menu, you can change your view type. Command 1, 2, 3, 4 goes through the different view types.
The only gotcha I can think of when cut/copy/pasting is that when you drag a file to move it, the OS will copy it when moving between two different drives, but cut when moving between two folders on the same drive. You can override the copying if you wish to cut by holding down the command key.
If you want to copy to the same drive you can hold down the option key to override the cutting.
You can also use command+c to copy, and command+v to paste. Command+x to cut only works for text. I have no idea why.
Right mouse click only gives the option to copy.
see? Perfectly clear and straightforward!