Boing Boing

Did I really just switch from Mac to Windows?

[This ran on Sunday in my weekly newsletter, The Magnet]

I bought my first computer, an Apple ][e, in early 1985. I think the total price (including the monitor and external 5 ¼" floppy disk drive) was about $3,000. I had to get an Apple credit card since I had no savings. I still have the card, 35 years later.

I loved ][e. I played Wizardry and all the Infocom text adventures on it, and when I got a modem, I explored BBSes every night. But sometime in 1988, I bought a PC because it was about half the price of an Apple computer and much more powerful. After that, I kept buying PCs when it was time to upgrade.

It wasn't until 2002 — after having used Billy Idol's Mac to design his Cyberpunk album cover and using a Mac at Wired magazine when I was an editor there — that I finally pulled the trigger and bought another Mac of my own. I loved the elegance of the Mac's operating system compared to Windows, which at the time was clunky, bloated, and buggy. When I told my friend Alberta that I'd switched, she told her friend who was a creative director at Apple's advertising agency Chiat Day, and he asked me if I'd like to be in a TV commercial for Apple about switching. (On the day Steve Jobs died in 2011, Bloomberg BusinessWeek asked me to write about being in the commercial.)

I've been happily using Macs ever since. But a little over a month ago, a representative for Gateway computers asked me if I'd like to try one of its new laptops. I was planning to say no thank you, but my 17-year-old daughter convinced me to give it a try. She's a gamer and programmer and switched from a Mac to a Windows machine when she was 14 or 15. She insisted I was giving Windows short shrift. So I emailed the representative and said OK. A few days later, I received a Creator Series 15.6″ Notebook (Model: GWTN156-2).

The first thing I noticed was the full-size keyboard with a numerical keypad. Mac laptops don't come with them. Booting up the machine revealed a second pleasant surprise: no bloatware! One of the things I hated about buying Windows computers in the 1990s was how they came pre-installed with all sorts of crappy applications that were hard to un-install. The Gateway machine was, for the most part, clean. It came with a Norton virus checker, but it was probably a good thing to keep. There was also a link to a web game of some kind, but it was easy to uninstall.

After using the Gateway for a month, here are my impressions:

Of course, there are a couple of things I miss about the Mac:

What next? I think I'm going to keep using Windows from now on. I do feel weird about it; it feels like switching political parties. I've been a loyal Mac user for almost 20 years. But in that time span, Windows has evolved into an excellent operating system. This, and the fact that Windows computers are much less expensive than Apple computers, is enough to put me in the Windows camp.

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