A few reasons:- Spotlight - Spotlight in OS X is better than ANY search tool I've seen yet. It's REALLY fast, it's simple, it searches my whole hard drive, (unlike Vista's start menu search bar) it does math equations without the need for a separate application, and it gives me definitions WITH Wikipedia articles. These things I want and need. All of this is presented to you quickly.
The speed is on how much ram you have and what your processor is clocking at. Mac users just seem to be lazier than any other OS user.
Not quite the same thing, since Mac's search features search help files from other programs, too. It also searches menus, and lots of other things not included in the "all files and folders" category.
Basically, windows can only search for physical files and objects, Macs search for words anywhere and categorizes them and make them easy to browse through (which we all know windows doesn't do, because when you search for all files and folders it just blindly throws them into the windows as it finds them.)
And just because Windows takes extra and unnecessary work doesn't make Mac users lazy.
It makes Windows users have to do extra and unnecessary work.
It's a computer. It's supposed to make things easier for you. That's why we buy them.
- Help Search - As shown in this video, it's easy to find items in programs and folders. There's really not an easier or quicker way to do it. I'm certain I've spent at least a total of a fraction of a year trying to find things in Windows.
I don't think Windows has a program to deal with retardation. ?_?
That's an INCREDIBLY weak argument for something that's just more convenient.
If you actually bought a Windows machine because you knew it would be more cumbersome and difficult to use, I'd say YOU were retarded.
- Spaces - Spaces is a great way to multitask. When using Leopard, I found myself flipping from space to space, all without the need for minimizing Windows. This may not be something everyone would use, but I found it to be a useful feature.
You've sort of beat windows, or atleast all the people who don't know about Blackbox.
I don't know about Blackbox. I doubt many others do, either.
Spaces comes with the OS, without any extra downloading or searching obscure internet forums (like this one) to find out about it.
Oh, and you can turn it off if you don't like it.
- Time Machine - Backing up files has never been easier. A few times a month I delete a file that I should have saved, and wind up regretting it later. With Time Machine I can retrieve that file EASILY.
You don't understand. Restore point on Windows is for system settings. It says right in the screenshot you posted that it deals with registry settings and technical junk like that.
Time Machine lets you go back and restore deleted
files and
documents.
You should at least understand the argument before trying to jump in.
- Zoom - I have bad eyes, and I need to zoom every now and then.
Windows has this feature. !_!
And so does Mac. !_!
- Quiet - The iMac had to be the most quiet computer I had ever used. My computer won't ever shut up, and I have to sleep with this thing on.
Anyone can build a quite computer ?_?
Nobody has to build a quiet Mac. They're all quiet. Just buy one. Hey, it's quiet.
- Looks - This isn't really a decider for me, but some of you are all "YEAH MAN I GOT A SUPER CASE WITH A WINDOW ON IT AND IT GLOWS BLUE AND IT'S PRETTY." Macs are, in my opinion, the most gorgeous computers on the market. 1 2 3
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And here's where you ran out of arguments.
Look, dude, if you don't like Apples, then don't buy them. I'm here defending Apples while I'm posting on my mom's Dell. I use both, and admit some handle certain things better than others, but that's no reason to just blindly hate on the system.