VivienM wrote on 2024-09-01, 22:20:
Yup, I think that's right... and then you continue this for close to another decade, and you end up with people believing that Intel MacBooks are just 'higher quality computers'. And in some ways they are, e.g. Apple hasn't cheaped out on wifi cards the way many PC OEMs were when they were giving you the crappiest 802.11n single-band card they could find, and Apple never used the bottom-of-the-barrel Intel processors, all the junk below i3 (and even then... I don't think Apple used a ton of i3s).
Apple had records of using inferior components and/or designs like keyboards and "antennagate." Didn't stop them to sell mundane items at hefty prices, though.
VivienM wrote on 2024-09-01, 22:20:
There have been plenty of high quality Windows desktops and laptops, but they require some amount of skill to acquire. And a much higher budget. I remember telling someone at work a few years ago that their ThinkPad cost $2xxx CAD and their reaction was "but you can buy a Mac for that much money." It is very, very difficult to sell good-quality Windows machines to the general public.
A brand name, especially an easy one ("apple" is one of the very first English words for a toddler to learn), is always more recognizable than a product line (iBook, MacBook vanilla/Air/Pro etc.) or a model number. Most consumers don't know the differences between models equipped with either PPC, x86, or ARM64; they simply call them "Apple."
Heck, I had a former coworker who couldn't tell if an airliner she took was either driven by "jets" (turbofan engines, to be exact) or propellers.
VivienM wrote on 2024-09-01, 22:20:
For the record, if it was my aunt or grandma faced with that budget and those options, I would have told her to buy a Celeron 600 (i.e. cheaper than your PIII 600) with onboard graphics/audio and spend the savings on more RAM and a higher-quality, bigger monitor. 😀 But big stores are even worse at selling good monitors than they are at selling good graphics/sound cards...
Well, one has to be capable of defining "good" before choosing a good product. Content creators (photographers, videographers, designers) want wide gamut coverage and calibrated color accuracy. Gamers want fast refresh rates and low lag. What do general consumers want? Pleasant colors (usually high contrast and saturation i.e. "punchy") with lowest prices. And those "punchy" monitors outsell the two "good" monitor types by a big margin.
This reminds me that novice users back then had two additional bad habits that made screen displays of low-end monitors even worse:
- Kept using VGA cable even if DVI connections were available at both ends (graphic cards and monitors)
- Set lower screen resolution "to make letters and icons bigger" instead of assigning more dots for fonts (usually from 96 to 120 DPI) and icons
VivienM wrote on 2024-09-01, 22:20:
(When I was budget constrained and ordering a Dell at that time, after having had two big-retailer-monitor-bundle junk CRTs, I deliberately chose the TNT2 M64 and the 700MHz Coppermine and spent the savings on a 19" Trinitron CRT. And twenty-four years later, I will tell you that I never, ever, ever regretted that decision and, indeed, have never bought a junky monitor for a main system since.)
I didn't like Sony Trinitron for those two thin black horizontal lines so I chose NEC MultiSync XP15 in December 1995 for NT$25,000 (almost US$800 today), one of the best non-Trinitron 15" monitor money could buy back then. Used it for six years before replacing it with a Philips Brilliance 107P. Should have kept at least one of them (sigh).