Posts Tagged ‘Computers’

Are Macs really cheaper to manage than PCs?

March 9th, 2010, posted in Mac Stuff

The following article is reprinted from CIO.com.

Macs in the enterprise aren’t just cheaper to manage—they’re a lot cheaper, according to a new survey released today by the Enterprise Desktop Alliance.

Keep in mind that Enterprise Desktop Alliance is a group of software developers who’ve bandied together to deploy and manage Macs in the enterprise. The group surveyed 260 IT administrators in large U.S. companies with both Macs and PCs who are involved in some degree with IT cost calculations. Enterprise Desktop Alliance members include Centrify, Absolute Software, Group Logic, Web Help Desk, and most recently IBM.

[Another Enterprise Desktop Alliance survey shows two out of three companies buying Macs this year, which will bring integration challenges for IT admins, CIO.com reports.]

The survey found that Macs were cheaper in six of seven computer management categories: troubleshooting, help desk calls, system configuration, user training and supporting infrastructure (servers, networks and printer). Nearly half of the respondents cited software licensing fees as roughly the same for both platforms.

A whopping 65 percent of respondents said it costs less to troubleshoot Macs than PCs, 19 percent said they spent the same on both computers, and only 16 percent said they spent less to manage PCs than Macs.

Even more impressive, a majority of the respondents citing the low cost of Macs in nearly all categories said Macs were more than 20 percent cheaper to manage than PCs.

With Macs dominating in almost every cost category, why would 16 percent claim they spent less troubleshooting PCs? “It might be an [issue] of expertise of the IT staff,” says Tom Cromlin, spokesperson for the Enterprise Desktop Alliance. “They’re probably more comfortable troubleshooting PCs.”

Enterprise Strategy Group analyst Jon Oltsik has another reason. He says top execs often prefer Macs, and thus supporting those machines take on more importance. “It’s not about managing [Mac] systems, which may be easier than Windows” on a machine-by-machines basis, Oltsik explains. “It’s when the CEO wants IT to install software on his or her Mac, which will need immediate attention and take time away from other tasks.”

The cost of management appears to be a key driver for Macs in the enterprise. Nearly half of respondents said they brought in Macs mainly because of their low total cost of ownership and ease of technical support.

In fact, many small companies with limited IT resources told CIO.com that they moved to Macs after getting fed up with costly PC support issues. “Mac owners tend to do a lot of problem resolution themselves by communicating with other users,” Oltsik says.

One of the flaws of the survey is that it doesn’t factor in the cost of the PC or Mac itself, only the costs associated with managing the computers. Macs, of course, cost more than most PCs. However, many companies told CIO.com that the low cost of managing Macs more than makes up the cost difference between the computers.

Many, but not all. “You can buy a PC for $400, while the cheapest Mac is over a thousand,” Jon Graff, director of IT operations at A&E, told CIO.com last year. “In the real world, you’re spending a lot more on a Mac.”

While managing Macs may be cheaper than managing PCs, Macs pose their own special challenges as companies get up to speed supporting a Mac-PC environment.

According to another recent Enterprise Desktop Alliance survey, chief among those hurdles are: security and file sharing between operating systems, client management, backup and data recovery of Mac files, Active Directory integration, application compatibility, configuration consistency, cross-platform help desk and knowledge base support, and standard management utilities for both Macs and PCs.

Ben Hanes, senior systems administrator at Children’s Hospital of Oakland Research Institute, has been working through these issues for years. On the troubleshooting front, Hanes only recently adopted a help desk system that lets his team troubleshoot Macs remotely from a PC.

There also might be hidden costs when managing Macs, warns Oltsik. “In the past, you generally needed specialized tools to manage Macs,” he says. “If this is the case, then you will have redundant tasks and management systems. Another issue is skills, as you may need to hire or train a PC administrator on the Mac platform. A Mac administrator may cost more than a PC administrator.”

Why Computer Operating Systems Are Like Religion

December 8th, 2009, posted in Mac Stuff, Random Musings

I don’t really know what made me think of this the other day. I was wandering around the internet and reading some of Ann Coulters racist, bigoted, mean-spirited conservative writings. Why? Well, how can you argue against something the other side says if you don’t pay attention to it and try to understand it. It’s easy to blow something off because it doesn’t jive with your own philosophy, and that usually makes reading it offensive and difficult. But it’s better to be educated in your dislike. Then at least you can debate it intelligently.

So how do I go from that to religion and computers. Who knows, there’s no rhyme or reason to my mental wanderings. Just ask my husband about the time we were quietly driving down the highway each lost in our own thoughts and I suddenly blurted out “I wonder why there is water inside a coconut.” Of course, I figured it out after thinking about it for awhile… but it didn’t lessen the absurdity of the moment as far as he was concerned. Even though it made perfect sense to me… he just hadn’t been in on the thought trail that led to that question.

But again, I digress.

Ann Coulter’s offensive arguments made me think of how people debate things, and how belief systems are often based on a complete absence of knowledge on the alternative point of view. And the most obvious example of that is religion. Pure and illogical belief in something intangible and untestable. And that kind of belief is dangerous and often vicious. Because people have no tangible method to prove their argument, it erupts into a case of “Because I believe so!” And when you attack someone’s belief structure, it becomes viewed as a personal attack rather than a philosophical one.

And thus I am led to computers… or rather computer systems. Mac vs PC specifically.

I’ve never slagged Macs, even though I never owned one until last year. I have on the other hand constantly slagged PC’s… even though I’ve owned them and worked (fought) with them for almost 30 years (from the first Tandy 1000). I did have a chance to play with one of the early Apple II computers back in the 80′s and it was the first time I’d ever seen a colour window or a mouse. And I never saw one again for a long, long time… until Microsoft finally figured out how to do both much later.

Maybe that’s where it all started. Maybe Microsoft was scared of the new computer and started a bit of a Holy Warthe-philosophical-fishmac_20vs_20pc.jpg against it back then…and it just continued. I don’t know, but what I do know is that somehow we got snookered into using a system that has twists and turns that punish you when you press the wrong button or type the wrong command. And then you must repent all your sins and reformat…yet again. Seems a bit like a confusing faith based system…. “If I just do XYZ, I’ll be saved and can get on with my life again until I make the next mistake and must repent yet again…”

And yet, with all that pain and suffering built on one operating system, why don’t more people change? Is the Mac viewed as a pagan religion? One that offers happiness and freedom because theirs is a friendly God that offers solutions? Or is the Mac a Godless religion with a leader who nurtures friendship to all and acceptance? It must be since the Mac has altered its architecture to allow the PC to operate within its confines, while the reverse is not true.

I think people are afraid of what they don’t understand. Afraid that they made a wrong choice and that it’s too late to change operating systems. And that fear manifests itself as derision and contempt towards something they haven’t taken the time to investigate. We are led to believe that our software won’t work. We are led to believe that there are no alternatives to the software we are used to. We are led to believe that it’s too difficult to switch. Let me tell you, if my 70 year old mother can do it…anyone can do it! Many software titles are available in both Mac and PC language. Many alternative software applications exist for the Mac that run faster, smoother and will even import the information from the former PC programs. But fear is larger than life and it is human nature to give in to fear. Fear of the unknown. But fear of the familiar unknown is apparently more comfortable than fear of the new unknown.

People get comfortable in their frustrations. After-all, they would have to find something new to complain about if they switched to something that offered less difficulty. People just love to complain and this would mean that they would have to find a new outlet for their need to gripe.

As I said, I never slagged Macs even though I didn’t have one. I knew people with Macs, intelligent people. The Marine Station I spent time at had Macs… and the people there were intelligent. Artists and musicians used Macs… and they did some amazing things. So there had to be something to this. And yet, at a friends house, her daughter was trying to connect her computer to the television to play a slide show, and the grandfather snarked out “Well, what do you expect, it’s a Mac!” When I made the switch, all sorts of people said “Are you crazy!?!?”

Why? Because they’ve succumbed to the belief that only a PC will get them through the day to day world of business and science. And I’m here to say, that simply isn’t true. And I can also say that in a year and a half of living with two Macs, I’ve not had to reformat a computer once…..I’ve shed no tears over them, and that’s worth more than anything I can think of.

Apparently I’m not the only person to think this way (although I am an atheist). In the writing of this I found the following:

Umberto Eco, the Italian semiologist, compared Macs and PCs to the two main branches of the Christian faith: Catholics and Protestants. The Mac is Catholic, he wrote in September 1994. It is “cheerful, friendly, conciliatory, it tells the faithful how they must proceed step by step to reach — if not the Kingdom of Heaven — the moment in which their document is printed.”

The Windows PC, on the other hand, is Protestant. It demands “difficult personal decisions, imposes a subtle hermeneutics upon the user, and takes for granted the idea that not all can reach salvation. To make the system work you need to interpret the program yourself: A long way from the baroque community of revelers, the user is closed within the loneliness of his own inner torment.”

My computer system is a benevolent computer system, one that doesn’t make me pay for my transgressions… and for that reason I believe that my Mac is atheistic, moving through time and evolving as its users find new ways to push its limits and test its abilities. I think if more people made the switch, the world would be a happier place and we would evolve at a pace that we decide, not one that The Gates dictates.

Of course, there is Steve Jobs at the helm.  Maybe it is a cult…I can live with that.

Have I mentioned that I love my Mac?

Shut up and pass the purple kool-aid!


Love Affair with the Mac

June 22nd, 2009, posted in Mac Stuff, Technology

I bought the first Mac 10 months ago…the laptop 7 months ago. The love affair has not ended. My Toshiba laptop has becomes Kirk’s machine (for the most part, although from time to time I still need it for odd things…like…ohhhh, taxes…)

Last night the Toshiba (and I might add that this is a very high end, very expensive Toshiba laptop) was sitting on the table and I spun it around to do a quick internet check for something… or at least as quick as you can do on a PC.

I opened it, ….. and waited….. and waited….finally I got annoyed and hard booted it…and it came up with some big update…. which of course bogs the computer down completely and makes it unusable while doing its thing (VISTA!!!).

Eventually I gave up and just went and got the Macbook….. oh yeah, I miss Windows…. terribly… snicker, snicker….

Can you say “SO glad I made the switch to Mac” ?????

Mac-Attack!

September 29th, 2008, posted in Mac Stuff, Technology

Oh I love my new Mac! Why did I wait so long. Well, the fact that I have two virtually new computers could probably be one reason…but the headaches just didn’t justify the continued support of the PC based system. No, I am a convert.

I’ve hit a few snags. My Creative Zen Vision won’t run the same way, the software is only PC based, but it still recognizes the unit as a portable drive and I can drag and drop video and images etc on to it and off of it. So that’s OK.

My Pharos iGPS-500 data logger won’t connect with the USB dongle no matter how hard I try. I have read that the bluetooth adapter works well with it and overcomes the serial port issue. So that is on order. It actually provides other benefits while on the road too…like the elimination of a cable snaking around the vehicle.

On the software side of things.

I have replaced OneNote with Circus Ponies Notebook. Not exactly the same, but pretty darned close. http://www.circusponies.com/

I replaced Adobe Contribute (which would run on the Mac but is a bit more than I needed) with MarsEdit. http://www.red-sweater.com/marsedit/

With a bit of tweaking (installing an OpenFire server protocol) I managed to get iChat to speak with my gmail and MSN messenger contacts. That was a bit of work, but there is a fantastic link to walk you through it here http://blog.toonetown.com/2007/12/10-steps-to-multi-protocol-ichat.html

I managed to pull all of my Outlook mail, contacts and calendar entries into Apple Mail using O2M. For $10 is was worth the money and worked effortlessly for both my account and the other half’s. http://www.littlemachines.com/

The only issue I still have from a software perspective is my navigational program. I used Fugawi for all my marine charts and was using SoftMap for the topographical maps and Streets and Trips for on the road navigation. Additionally I was using Trips and Pics for geotagging my photos EXIF data. None of these will run on a Mac unless I install Windows underneath…and that defeats the purpose of the switch…and then there is the issue that they all need the CPS logger to run…which it won’t…yet..

I have found a couple of programs that might do for the Marine charts. GPSNavX and MacENC (http://www.gpsnavx.com/) are supposed to work with the charts I have, but I am still having the issue with the GPS being recognized. I’m hoping that when the bluetooth piece comes that might overcome that issue and I will be able to settle on one or the other.

RouteBuddy (http://www.routebuddy.com/) seems to be a substitute for Streets and trips…but pricey!

Jetphoto (http://www.jetphotosoft.com) will do what Trips and Pics did…and a whole lot more if, again, I can get it to see my GPS, which currently it will not.

Haven’t yet found a substitute for SoftMap, but that was more of a novelty anyway….but it would be nice to get it working. It seems like GPSy Pro (http://www.gpsy.com/pro/) might do the trick…will have to try it out to see.

Not bad really…all things considered…

Taking the Plunge

September 17th, 2008, posted in Mac Stuff, Technology

OK, I’ve done it. I ordered a Mac! Now I am impatiently awaiting its arrival and frantically trying to find replacement software for a few programs. I think I have it mostly ironed out, I guess I’ll find out when it arrives finally. Probably the funniest thing is that everyone who finds out I am switching says one of two things:

#1. – WHY! (Those would be the PC users)…or

#2. – Welcome to the light! (Those would be the Mac users)

It’s like you have joined some weird little club. Let’s see if I become like one of those reformed smokers….