It's true MACs use 98% of the same components as a PC but the difference between MAC and PC is how easily can you make repairs to it. I am no expert at PCs yet i've changed hard drives, added memory and changed CD drives...how easily can that be done on an imac?
Cnet has a step by step process of how to change a HD on an imac and the process is not for any layman at PCs.
There is a difference between opening a case, swapping out parts and opening a case, removing the screen, disconnecting internal wires to get to the HD. Mac pros are an exception but how many owners of Macs own those!
Also I love the $900 for 8gb of memory. Classy Apple, very classy.
So it sounds like your problem is more with the design of the iMac than anything else. Someone like you probably wouldn't get an iMac, you'd get a Mac Pro. And that's fine. No one computer is for everybody, the iMac is no exception. Personally, I like having a separate tower, too, and when the iMac first came out, I thought they were butt-ugly. They're getting nicer each rev, though. I'd consider one mainly for the price.
But consider that the average person buying an iMac is not someone who would make his or her own repairs to a computer even if it was easily possible, PC or Mac, it makes no difference. The fact that
you don't like it doesn't make it a poor choice for the millions of people that have already bought one or are looking to get one. They don't care that they can't easily get inside of it; they know that's what the warranty is for, that's all that matters to them.
I agree with you about Apple's pricing for memory. I wonder how many people they're fooling into paying those kinds of prices. Of course, as you know, you don't have to buy memory from Apple.
When I was out looking at Macs the parts (and the original computer) were far more expensive than parts for the PC. I chose the PC because it was more reasonably priced. If you put a non-Mac "blessed" part into a Mac you violate your warranty. So you pay extra for those parts with the Mac "blessing".
I don't know if that's true for most parts, like memory or hard drives, and in any event, the prices I have seen for "Mac" memory and "Mac" hard drives were the same, or very nearly so, as the non-"Mac" version, which was exactly the same part in a differently-labeled box (except for hard drives, which are the same part but formatted for Mac as well).
In any event, when the warranty runs out, you don't have to worry about that anymore. I don't know what the desktop standard warranty is, but for laptops, it's one year, so I would only assume it's the same for desktops. How much upgrading are you really going to need to do within the first year, anyway? It probably would have been cheaper to just buy an upgraded computer in the first place.
Two to three and a half grand for a MAC laptop is overpriced to me. If I can buy a brand new PC laptop for $600 or less with the same computing capabilities I'm getting the PC laptop.
The $600 PC laptop doesn't compare directly to a $3,000 Mac laptop and I think you know it.* It doesn't compare anymore than it compares to a $3,000 PC laptop. You're talking about two different leagues here. Are the cheapest PC laptops cheaper than the least expensive Mac laptops? Yes. Same is true for desktops. Apple does not play to the bargain-basement market. That is a strategic marketing decision on their part.
But by using this same faulty logic, I can say that PCs are overpriced. There are PC laptops on the market for over $6,000. No Mac laptop with a standard price anywhere near that high (adding all possible hardware upgrades to their top-end 17" MacBook Pro gives you a $4899 price tag). Therefore, I conclude that PCs are overpriced.
* Show me a $600 PC laptop with a 2.93GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 4GB 1066MHz DDR3 SDRAM, 320GB Serial ATA Drive @ 5400 rpm, 17-inch 1920x1200 pixel LED-backlit display, NVIDIA GeForce 9400M integrated GPU and 9600M GT discrete GPU, 8x (DVD±R DL/DVD±RW/CD-RW), backlit keyboard, battery that lasts up to 8 hours and can be recharged up to 1,000 times, weights 6.6 pounds and is less than one inch thick. Those are the specs for the $3099 17" MacBook Pro (I had to upgrade the 2.66GHz Intel Core 2 Duo for $300 to get to your $3000 price point; with this CPU, it's $2799). Show me a $600 PC laptop that can match this, and that's a challenge.
Then you underestimate your friend. A lot of people, like yourself, wouldn't touch a laptop.
I find both platforms have their own merits but I can't stand how Apple price gouges on upgrades.
But generally I really can't stand Apple fans. I have a friend who gets annoyed when I call her MAC a PC because she doesn't want the word PC anyway near her Mac...that is idiotic.
Also I love asking the question "Why is MAC better for graphic design than a PC?" to Apple shouters. I have yet to hear an answer that wasn't laughable lunacy.
I don't really like fanboys of any type, although I know lately, I probably come across as an Apple fanboy. But even though I try to correct and educate where appropriate, I do not believe myself to be a true fanboy. I would never say PCs suck or PC users are stupid or anything along those lines. Windows is a decent platform and there are many things about Windows I still like better. (Keep in mind, I only switched to Mac a little over a year ago, after being a Windows use since 3.0, so the MS experience is still fairly fresh in my mind.) While Vista had more than its share of problems, visually, it was a nice OS, and I don't think it's currently still as crappy as its first impressions created. I think Windows 7 will probably be a very nice OS, and I will probably buy a copy to replace XP in my Boot Camp and VMware virtual machine.
Ultimately it's about tools to get the job done. I had problems getting the job done with Windows, so I switched to Mac. (I could not upload photos to a Microsoft photo sharing site through Microsoft's browser running on Microsoft's OS, despite multiple downloadings and installings and updatings, and finally got fed up.) As for graphics design, and the other things Macs are supposedly better for? I don't know, I haven't really tried most of that stuff, and I haven't been in the Mac world long enough to know the history. And it's in the history where I believe the answers are located. I think years ago the desktop publishing, photo editing, and graphics arts softwares available for Mac were far better than their Windows counterparts. While the differences may be minimal now, I think the image maintains, as well as the large existing user base of people who just won't switch because what they have already works just fine, so why bother. And they are right to not switch. After all, if you'd been using Mac software for years, would you now switch to Windows just because the Windows version of your software is almost, or equally, as good? Of course not.