I love laptop computers. Because I love my lap. But that’s really a whole other dysfunction.
Speaking of dysfunctions, in Feb. 2007 I bought a Dell laptop, the Inspiron We Hate You. Its operating system is Vista Home Basic.
If you’ve ever used Vista Home Basic, you’re not reading this. Because you’re dead. Because you killed yourself. After I used Vista Home Basic, I wanted help killing myself. So I Googled “escape Vista!”. The moment I had finished typing the word “Vista,” Internet Explorer hijacked me to www.BillGates.com, whereupon my screen froze like the Tin Woodsman exiting a Norwegian steam bath.
Then a window popped up in the middle of my screen. It was a video of Bill Gates, whose visage flickered and skipped just a bit.
“Vista user John Shore,” intoned the visage of Bill Gates. “Why are you searching the word ‘Vista’? You do not speak Spanish. Our records show that you took Spanish 101 in the year of 1970, John Shore. You attended that class at Collins Junior High School, in Cupertino, California. Cupertino, California. Cupertino, California.” Bill’s image froze, and then shook as if rattled. The image stabilized. Bill resumed his message.
“Do you think there is something wrong with your Microsoft operating system, John Shore? Because there isn’t. But as a precaution against future imaginary system malfunctions, you will now need to downloaded MS SmokingPatch #4563455594842484666,666. Several moments ago, we attempted to automatically download this fix onto your computer, but were unable to complete this task because at that time you, Mr. Shore, were interfering with the proper functioning of your computer by attempting to use it. That is in strict violation of our No Use user-end policy. We can no longer assist you. For assistance, please call Dell Computers, at 1-800-GOODLUK, where, after forty-five minutes spent playing our game of Choose and Lose, a Seconal-dazed Micro Tek dropout will mumble unintelligibly at you for twenty minutes before suddenly disconnecting you. Thank you, and remember: Microsoft doesn’t mean small and limp. It doesn’t! It doesn’t! It never did!”
Anyway, I’m very pleased to report that I am now writing to you on my brand new MacBook, which my wife surprised me with last night. I’m so excited about my new computer that I may never sleep again. The MacBook seems to actually work. More radically, it seems predicated upon the idea that I might be perfectly capable of knowing my own needs. Unlike the platform of the PC (Proactively Controlling? Peevishly Claustrophobic? Profoundly Clunky? Potentially Catastrophic? Phenomenally Calloused? Passionately Conniving? Positively Creepy? Purposefully Confounding? Purposefully Confusing? Purposefully Complicated? Probably Contaminated? Somebody stop me?), Apple’s operating system doesn’t try to protect me, guide me, help me, inspire me, direct me, correct me, or question my choice of breakfast cereals. It pretty much lets me be.
I am now a Happy Creator. And, like the One who created us all, I am saddened by the way Adam responded to the apple given to him by his life-mate. But I’m loving the way I’m responding to the one given to me by mine.
(P.S. The reason I put the “I’m Back to Mac” part in this post’s title is because one of my first real computers was a Mac SE. And when I worked in magazines, I worked on all kinds of Macs. So in that way this is a bit of a homecoming for me.)
Another Apple-y thing I wrote awhile back: Why I Don’t Want an iPhone. Wait. Why I Do.
Just out: UNFAIR: Why the “Christian” View of Gays Doesn’t Work (softcover edition; Kindle edition; NookBook edition). You’re invited to check out my Facebook page, and my group Unfundamentalist Christians, the motto of which is “Above all, love.”



























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What I really want to know is, is there some special biblical dispensation for divorce if your spouse keeps making you buy PCs because "Only hippies buy Macs."?
Because if there isn't, there should be.
I love PCs and Macs. No question but that working on a Mac is dreamy and working on a PC is like passport control in the former Soviet bloc. But I like Eastern Europe. Besides, Windows is business-standard, and business has the money. If it worked effortlessly, what would they need me for?
My specialty for years was PowerPoint, the most-used most-hated product ever. Keynote has a different workflow interface, but the result is the same. A skilled operator can make PowerPoint look like Keynote and vice versa. The only difference is the beauty of some of the Keynote page transitions, and no one uses those anyway. Bringing attention to how the pages move instead of focusing on the content is amateurish. PowerPoint gives you a lot more fine-tuning control.
Coming up with work-arounds to make Mac and PC play nicely together used to be half the fun. Now it's almost dependable. But who am I to talk? These days I do most of my typing through my phone.
Dave: You’re BARELY kidding, though. I actually did experience—and still am, kind of—-this bizarre sort of mental transition thing where I STILL keep waiting for my Mac to act in the volatile, erratic, stubborn, utterly difficult way my PC’s always had. I’m just GEARED to think I have to … really, really INTERACT with my PC to get it to work smoothly at all. Now, with this MacBook, I’m learning I don’t need to DO anything but … lift the lid.
As DC says: It’s bliss. I love it.
It will, but when it does, it will be a power failure – literal one, from the power company.
Oh, wait, you have a Notebook with a battery.
My bad.
Mine when through that yesterday. God only knows why, but everything blinked. EVERYTHING. Maybe the Matrix Of Illusion had a computer glitch in my brain, eh?
No, bang, no pop, the transformers kept on buzzing outside. (Yea, we can see/hear transformers and wires out here.)
Mind you, being hooked up to an oxygen concentrator http://www.flickr.com/photos/87832879@N00/3699205… 24-hrs-a-day and having that alarm off and fail because of it was a tad disconcerting for a moment.
The Mac Mini http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2460/3719186993_71… was snoozing in sleep mode, when it happened.
When I came in, it had semi-rebooted, and was waiting for my password.
I entered it, it flew right along, and said " 'lectricity? What 'lectricity problem!? I sure don't have one!"
And it was right!
TYPO:
"Mine when through that yesterday."
SHOULD BE:
"Mine went through that yesterday."
Can I blame it on chronic oxygen deprivation? Failure to proff read. Er. I mean proof read.
Oh, bother!
When I first made it “back to mac” just over a year ago, I didn’t know what to do with myself. I was used to spending 2/3 of my computer time figuring out why my PC was behaving the way it did. I didn’t know how to spend my time when the computer actually worked. Without the constant supply of errors and questions, I was free and forced to face myself and my own interests… what a mistake that was! (just kidding.)
Welcome to the Mac world. It's the closest technological equivalent to a conversion: over here, there's sense and light, but people on the outside think we're nuts.
If only you were as ignorant as I am, you wouldn't notice any difference at all between a PC and a Mac. But then again, I use my PC as nothing more than a glorified typewriter. So, what I'm trying to say is, ignorance is bliss.
What's home Vista?
VISTA comes in several flavors Home Basic, Home Premium, Professional, etc.
Home Basic is very that: BASIC. Very limited capacity. Cost a lot less than the other versions, too.
Oh, wow. I just watched two of the ads. They're brilliant. Exceptional work. A (at this point) hackneyed structure, of course, but done well. For Arresting Factor, you can't beat contextually contrasted Average Yet Somehow Exceptional people staring into the camera and making something approaching deeply personal statements.
But, you know. It a freakin' AD.
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