I love my Macbook Pro. It's the early 2008, 15" (non-unibody) model, and although I wish I had the new 15" unibody, I still love mine. Let me explain.Yesterday was parent-teacher night. Since my school switched from having two sessions, an afternoon session plus an evening session, to just one session (5:30 - 8:00 p.m.) I've noticed that many fewer teachers bring their computers. I think I know why. Their computers won't run that long. Mine ran that long, and more.
In between discussing student marks with parents, I worked on some microcontroller programming. My marks are in Numbers on the Mac, and my programming environment was Microchip's MPLAB, running in Windows XP, running in a VMWare virtual machine on the Mac. So, I ran two OSes and two apps in each for two-and-a-half hours. Not bad!
Now, look at the graphic, above. I took that screen-grab when parents night ended. You can see the Windows windows, and the Mac's menu bar, including a battery meter that indicates I still have 2h 15min of battery life left. Nearly five hours of indicated battery life while running two OSes with a couple of apps in each. I love my Mac!
To be fair, I had Wi-Fi off (no wireless in the gym), the display at half-brightness (which is plenty bright with LED backlighting - in fact I'm writing this in my living room with the display auto-dimmed to one-third brightness now), and I had all the apps running before I unplugged the Mac to go to the gym, but all those apps were still using processor cycles, and that kind of battery life is impressive in a year-old laptop.
So, I guess battery life is one good reason why I can love my MacBook Pro. While I'm on the topic, here are ten other reasons I love my MacBook Pro. This won't be the typical 'nerd' PC vs. Mac specifications vs. price shoot-out, I promise! This also isn't meant to start a PC vs. Mac flame-war (there's enough of those all over the internet!). This is just my observations of what I've come to really love about my Mac over time. Let's go!
1. The multi-touch trackpad
Yes, really! Multi-touch is so intuitive and pervasive on the Mac, that I notice its absence within seconds of using any Windows notebook. I can't say enough about it. Multi-touch really is that good. And, yes, I love the single button, too. I'm right-handed and when I go to use a PC laptop now, my thumb keeps accidentally right-clicking. How annoying! Yes, you can right-click on a Mac - it's simply a two finger 'tap'.
2. Multiple OSes
I regularly run OS X, Windows XP and Ubuntu (Intrepid) 64 bit on my Mac. I've also run FreeBSD, FreeDOS, Windows 7, eBox, and other bits of code to demo for my classes. Yes, I know other OSes can run virtual machines, too, but none can run OS X (at least not legally). Which leads me to...
3. OS X
X as in ten. Like ten, on a scale of one to ten. Since switching, OS X is my OS of choice as it lets me get more done with fewer hassles. Yes, I've used Windows - every version from 3.0 on (even ME!), except Vista (you probably know why). I've used OS/2 Warp. I've used Linux and Unix. I've used Amiga OS (versions 1, 2, and 3). I've used DOS. Trust me, in comparison OS X is a ten!
For the few times it doesn't let me do what I need to do, I use VMWare (see 2, above).
4. Uptime

OS X is stable. I remember my last hard-reboot like it was three weeks ago (Hey, it really was three weeks ago!). It was after Photoshop Elements stopped responding and I wanted to start fresh and flush all traces of Rosetta (Photoshop Elements is a Power PC application that runs under 'Rosetta' emulation) from my system. From then on it's been close the lid - sleep. Open the lid - compute. Repeat. No weird Windows ACPI issues, like my old HP that might or might not wake from hibernate, or my friend's Thinkpad that woke up in its bag one day and cooked itself. :-(
5. Mobile Me
Well worth the hundred bucks! When I change my email settings on my Mac, they change automatically on my iPhone. When I add a bookmark in Mobile Safari, it automatically appears on my desktop. When my MacBook Pro display died (Apple repaired the computer in just six business days), all my important files, emails, and Keychain items were automatically (automagically?!?) available on my old PowerBook that I used instead. Not having to do anything out of the ordinary to make it all work - awesome!
6. Spotlight
When a Spotlight search can pull out the 1,898 photos taken with my new Nikon D90 from the 15,023 photos on my computer within three seconds, you can't help but be impressed. When you can further separate the photos in a 'smart folder' from the Finder by selecting the ones in which the flash fired, and the focal length was greater than 150mm, and which were taken in the last three months, it's magic!
7. Preview
It's built into Leopard, and it lets me 'preview' any document (PDF, images, videos, Word, Excel, Powerpoint, iWork) from anywhere (desktop, folder, email) instantly. Ok, not technically instantly, but (and I'm including the animation effect) in less time than it takes to say, let alone load, Acrobat Reader! I use it constantly.
8. The iApps
iWork and iLife are like iCrack for computers. Once you try them, you're hooked. Apple can release an update for iWork or iLife at any time, and I'm there, ready to plunk down my $129 for a Family Pack. Don't even get me started on the Keynote and iTunes remote apps for the iPhone. Here's my credit card!
iWork and iLife are not without their flaws, but you do get great bang for the buck. Some examples: Although I'm outgrowing iPhoto, it's exactly the right app for the rest of my family and easily organizes tens of thousands of photos by event. Next, I once created a soundtrack for a video presentation by throwing together sound loops in GarageBand so I could match the music to the presentation. Last, but not least, there's the time I recovered my brother-in-law's Word document, the one that Word itself refused to read, literally minutes before the deadline for submission in his MBA course. (It was the difference between a pass and a fail.)
9. The cost of upgrades
You don't need much in the way of hardware upgrades, since most Macs come with high end processors and decent specifications already. The real deal is the cost of the software upgrades.
We have four Macs and two PCs in our house and we take advantage of the Family Pack upgrades for both the OS and iApps. For less than the cost of buying two pieces of software, Apple's Family Pack lets us install the software on up to five machines. Needless to say, our Macs are running the latest software. Our PCs are not, because we don't like the feeling of being nickeled and dimed on the upgrades (would you like your Vista Basic, Premium, or Ultimate? OEM, upgrade, or full version? Would you like the newest Office with that?).
10. The upgrades
The upgrades themselves really are upgrades. OS upgrades add features and increase in performance. They come often, on average every 18-24 months, and deliver both evolutionary change and a special new nugget that you can't live without. Preview and Spotlight fall into this category.
The newest iWork, too, added a bunch of new features and is noticeably snappier than the old one. On top of the reasonable upgrade cost, you really feel good knowing you got something of useful value or utility. I'm willing to pay for that!
11. The little things
I know, I know. I said I would list only ten more reasons I love my Mac, but all the little things that make the Mac special are way too big to leave out. Things like:
- a global dictionary that let's me know as I mis-spell words (even in Safari in this blog post)
- the power brick, and Mag-Safe
- the backlit keyboard, and automatic screen brightness (and that gorgeous LED backlit display)
- Airport wireless printing and music streaming
- the included (with my model, anyway) IR remote
- extended desktop (and Keynote presenter display!)
- Exposé (try it with the Shift key), and 'hot corners'
- Time Machine
- the overall fit and finish of the products
- the packaging
- no stickers (on the computers), and stickers (Apple logo) in the box
- and, finally, the reactions you get from people, both positive and negative, when you tell them you use a Mac!
When It comes to computers, the choice is not just about price, it's about engineering, function, usability and utility. Choosing a $2000 MacBook Pro over a 'bargain' $899 PC laptop is exactly like choosing $129 Nike running shoes over the $29 bargain brand shoes at Zellers, or choosing a $56,000 BMW over a $16,000 Toyota. It's not that the bargain brand running shoes or the Toyota Corolla aren't functional, it's just that you can't claim that they're in the same league as the Nikes or the 5 series. It's your choice, and you get what you pay for.


