PC vs. Mac Holiday Shopping: Which Computer Type Is Best?

PC vs. Mac Holiday Shopping: Which Computer Type Is Best?
PC or Mac? It’s the longest-running question in personal technology — along with the Mac itself, the debate turns 27 next month — and probably the most contentious one. A small but noisy percentage of computer owners consist of people who aren’t content to pick a computing platform and leave it at that. Instead, they question the IQ and/or taste of anyone who makes a buying decision different from their own. Hence the classic stereotypes: the Windows user as a clueless sucker for punishment, and the Mac fan as a spendthrift fetishist.

In the spirit of the holiday season, I’d like to propose a truce. Most folks who buy computers are neither bozos nor cultists. They’re smart consumers who know what’s important to them, do their research and choose accordingly. Or they refuse to take sides.

Some of you already know which type of computer your next machine will be. That’s fine. This column is for those of you who are still mulling over both options as you shop for a holiday PC or think about a system you’ll buy next year. The single most important point of differentiation between the platforms is a simple one. Apple has a clear vision of what a personal computer should be and expresses it in a few highly refined variations. Meanwhile, the companies that make Windows PCs — and there are gazillions of ’em — offer something for everyone.

Over the past few years, Apple has ditched plastic in favor of sturdy, lightweight, stylish aluminum cases on all its models except the lowly MacBook. All portable Macs now have sealed-in batteries: you can’t swap in a spare when you run out of juice, but eliminating the compartment and door allows Apple to use a larger, longer-lasting battery without adding bulk and weight. The company, long notorious for its minimalist one-button mouse, has done away with even that one button: with current Mac laptops, you press down the entire touchpad to register a click. It also seems to be telling us that the days of hard disks and optical drives are numbered, judging from the new solid-state MacBook Airs.

Back in the day, Macs were often the first computers to incorporate next-big-thing technologies. When Apple first demonstrated wi-fi networking in 1999, it was such an exotic concept that Steve Jobs passed an iBook through a hoop to prove it was unencumbered by cables. Today, however, the company seems content to opt out of most of the rest of the industry’s hottest trends. It doesn’t build Blu-ray players or TV tuners or touchscreens into Macs, as many new PCs do, and only the pint-size Mac Mini has an HDMI port for easy HDTV hookups. Macs often have speedier processors than similar Windows boxes, but they’re frequently tighter on RAM, hard-disk space and USB ports.

Then again, judging a computer’s value primarily in terms of the size of its drive or the quantity of ports is generally a bad idea. Macs are full of features that are hard to quantify but easy to love once you’ve experienced them: at the same time that many PC makers were slashing costs by moving tech-support operations to distant corners of the world, for instance, Apple reduced the distance between customer and service rep to a few inches by building more than 300 Apple Stores with in-person Genius Bar help desks. It also includes the excellent iLife 2011 creativity suite, which includes tools for wrangling and editing photos, videos, music and more, with every Mac. Windows PCs that sell for way-less-than-a-Mac prices rarely include anything even remotely comparable. Even Mac’s AC adapters — with damage-resistant MagSafe connectors and fold-out wings that let you neatly wind up the cord — show an attention to detail lacking in the generic bricks supplied with nearly every Windows PC.

Some Windows machines compete on Apple’s turf. HP’s Envy line, for instance, was clearly designed with the MacBook Pro in its crosshairs, and Dell’s Adamo aims to out–MacBook Air the MacBook Air. Most PCs, however, aren’t Mac-like in the least. They’ve got Blu-ray and HDMI and all the other features absent in Macland. They address audiences that get short shrift from Apple, such as big-business types and gamers. There are PCs for people who want a laptop that can survive a sudden tumble onto the pavement — or one that was designed by Vivienne Tam.

Most of all, many Windows PCs cater to people who aren’t able to pay Apple-like prices for a computer.

Share