Opinion: What's wrong with Mac OS X?
In short, not much -- although it falls short for business use
InfoWorld - Paul Venezia bamboozled me into buying a MacBook Pro back in January, and I've been using it semi-daily ever since. And yeah, overall, I've been pretty happy. Of course, the only reason I was willing to buy one at all was because Parallels made it so easy to run Windows. But while my initial usage ratio was 85% Parallels, 15% OS X, over the past six months, that's changed dramatically to 45% Parallels, 55% OS X. Yup, the Orchard does slowly assimilate you.
But not everyone that uses a Mac is suddenly streaming sunshine. Scour the Web looking for unhappy Mac users and you'll find that they're just as vocal as those who hate Windows (like this guy off Google Video).
Does Mac OS X suck? After six months of playing with the platform, I have a viable opinion. I'm looking at the Mac from the perspective of a Windows-centric network manager and grading basic categories on a pass/fail basis.
Windows networking
Nobody complains about this because it works. OS X has an excellent networking client, both wired and wireless -- due in large part to FreeBSD rather than anything coming out of Cupertino. Seriously, I think it's noticeably better than Vista for pure IP networking. Plugging Macs into enterprise-class server-based applications is often the trick, but I'm leaving that for the software section below.
Grade: Pass (with a smile)
Security
Short one because Apple's made good use of its Unix roots. It's a pretty secure system. Yes, ever since OS X has become more popular, attacks and breaches on the platform have become more numerous. And, yes, those numbers are high enough that if I were managing a portfolio of MacBooks, I'd be installing antivirus on them; you won't get away with saving yourself the AV expense -- at least, not without violating best-practice auditing.
That said, once the personal firewall is up and the AV installed, I'd fully expect to see far, far fewer security-related problems from my Mac clients than my Windows clients. Simple fact, there it is.
Grade: Pass (with a smile)
Reliability
Apple users, including Sasquatch Venezia, make a big point out of how OS X and its applications "simply work" and "never crash." Sorry, but that's crap. I have crashed both Mac apps and OS X. On the crash issue, the question isn't whether it can crash; the question is whether it crashes more often than Windows.
Pre-XP, no question Apple wins. XP Pro, post-SP1, I'd have to think a little, but I'd give it to Apple. Vista post-shrink-wrap ... that's tricky. Personal experience says they're about tied -- I'm talking about the operating systems now, not the apps.



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