Windows vs MacOS, why I switched…

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 2. 06. 2024
  • In this video, I explain why I switched from Windows (my main operating system for many years) to a Mac! I will quickly cover Apple Silicon with M1 and M2, why Mac OS is great for developers and tech guys, and about some unique capabilities of macOS. #Windows #macOS #OperatingSystem
    Teleport-*: goteleport.com/thedigitallife
    Follow me:
    TWITTER: / christianlempa
    INSTAGRAM: / christianlempa
    TWITCH: / christianlempa
    DISCORD: / discord
    GITHUB: github.com/christianlempa
    PATREON: / christianlempa
    MY EQUIPMENT: kit.co/christianlempa
    Timestamps:
    00:00 - Introduction
    01:29 - Advertisement-*
    02:15 - How good are Apple Computers?
    05:25 - Look and feel of macOS
    07:41 - Working with macOS
    08:57 - Why it's great for tech guys
    11:58 - Unique features of Apple Devices
    13:37 - Apps and Support
    16:11 - Outro
    ________________
    All links with "*" are affiliate links.

Komentáře • 664

  • @aaronepperson4041
    @aaronepperson4041 Před rokem +133

    I switched to Windows around 3 years ago, and honestly, I'm always looking for a reason to hop back to MacOS. I know that it's not perfect, but I am not a tech guy, and Windows is like having a constant argument, while MacOS is a guy who's kind of snooty but willing to help me out. OS really comes down to personal choice, temperament, and the job you're looking to get done. So I don't understand why people get so angry. It's just computers.

    • @jayp9158
      @jayp9158 Před rokem +12

      Just curious, if you aren't a tech guy what are you doing in such a niche channel like this?

    • @adriancandelario2902
      @adriancandelario2902 Před rokem +1

      @@jayp9158 yea that's actually a good question. A lot of videos of this channel I say are for people for are at least somewhat into Tech

    • @aaronepperson4041
      @aaronepperson4041 Před rokem +14

      ​@@jayp9158 I toy around with stuff. I'm just not good at it. Regarding tech hobbies, I thought about doing a home lab, but it didn't seem worth the money. I don't have any complex needs beyond simple file sharing. I might funnel my interest in science and technology into getting a HAM Radio license because communication systems have always fascinated me.
      On top of that, I do some freelance writing for tech companies on the side. I need to understand concepts and be able to follow along enough to get the job done. Channels like this and others on CZcams have been fantastic (Thanks, Christian!). It also lets me know what to ask IT people, programmers, and engineers when researching a project. The better questions I can ask, the better product I produce. For example, I did some work for a company explaining the core ideas of Kubernetes to non-technical decision-makers. While it's open source, costs are still involved, and people unfamiliar with these systems have difficulty conceptualizing things like containerization and orchestration.

    • @timderks5960
      @timderks5960 Před rokem +7

      I understand why people get so angry, and it's exactly for the reason you outlined: it's a personal choice. For some people, it's hard to understand that others have other preferences, and in their opinion / for their usecase, only one of the OSes works. For example, for a PC gamer, thinking of MacOS as a viable OS is just not happening. It's easy to forget that others may not play games on their PC, and that MacOS can work fine for their usecase.

    • @jayp9158
      @jayp9158 Před rokem +3

      @@aaronepperson4041 That sounds great and makes a lot of sense. Good luck with everything!

  • @markring40
    @markring40 Před rokem +35

    I started with Apple in the 1980s. Switched to PCs in the 90s, then to Linux in the late 1990s. One year ago I took the plunge and bought and M1 Macbook Pro 16 inch. I love it! As you pointed out the OS is based on BSD / Unix so working in the terminal is very intuitive. There was a bit of a learning curve in finding where everything was located in the desktop environment, but I found lots of great CZcams videos to help me out. I'm looking forward to you creating content for the Apple world.

  • @evancycles
    @evancycles Před 11 měsíci +57

    I guess you were looking for something different. I was a Mac loyalist for a decade, but then I went back to Windows after my Macbook Pro crashed in a meeting and I wanted something different. I don't regret it at all. Windows has been great, stable, and reliable, for all things I do. I still have an iPhone and an iPad, and an Apple Watch. My custom-built PC is my gadget pride and joy. I can make it whatever I want. I put in the time and effort to learn how to build it too. There is a sense of accomplishment with that. My PC has the latest AMD Ryzen and RTX 4080 gpu, which are amazing for gaming and creating stuff. And 4K gaming with NVIDIA DLSS is mind-blowing. Playing games at 4K with relatively high FPS is awesome! 8K video editing not a problem. I also have a solidly built 2022 Legion Pro 7 laptop that is super powerful on the go. I don't care much about Apple Silicon battery life, because generally my laptop exceeds my needs. And I can still get decent battery life on my laptop, enough for across country flight or a long stay at a cafe. And if I want to watch videos or read on a flight or play casual games, I'll pull out the iPad. I also like having a num pad on my laptop for serious data work. MacBooks don't have that. :( Windows OS vs Mac OS, I've used both, and Windows wins for me, in productivity. Windows has better off-the-shelf windows management than Macs, especially in Windows 11. And gaming on a PC is better, 3D work on a PC seems to be a win too. For many, it comes down to personal preference. I know people, many who swear by Mac. But many of those have not touched a PC in for many years. I like both, but I prefer Windows right now. Maybe someday I'll get bored of my Windows machines and get a MacBook Pro....by that time I suspect it will be an M5 Ultra chip...who knows. :) ... But I think it's more likely that I'll consider a Framework laptop. I like what Framework is doing. Framework lets you customize and upgrade many of the components in your laptop. That's better for the planet (maybe) and once again user can build out what they want, change it as your needs change. Anyway, PC technology is getting so good on both camps.

    • @haomingli6175
      @haomingli6175 Před 8 měsíci

      you seem to like customization of the hardware. then mac might never be for you.

    • @moyenaak
      @moyenaak Před 5 měsíci

      PC is better in my opinion!

  • @MarbsMusic
    @MarbsMusic Před rokem +12

    I left MacOS in the late 90s for Windows (Business/Gaming) and Linux/Solaris for technical work. I used to run MAE (Macintosh Application Environment) on Solaris but it wasn't the best. I kick myself because I didn't try OSX early on. I bought an M1 air when they came out and have move back to MacOS over the past few years. Like you I have many things scripted to run in the background, love having a real terminal etc... It's exactly the OS I so wanted 25 years ago, just sad it took so long for me to give it a chance. Two of my sons, one doing Final Cut work and the other a Comp Sci major have switched except for gaming as well. High hopes for Metal3 and getting Devs to focus on MacOS over the next few years.

  • @MarsorryIckuatuna
    @MarsorryIckuatuna Před rokem +3

    You understand macOS very well. For the specific use case of copying and pasting URL’s with Universal Clipboard - that’s ok, but a better feature for that would be “Continuity” - your devices recognize each other and you can carry on where you leave off between supported apps… (mostly the native apps).

  • @APNetworX
    @APNetworX Před rokem +59

    I use the rectangle app for window management, works really well, but I agree, it is a bit odd that you have to install a third party app for something that should be integrated into the OS like in Windows.

    • @kissdaniel2435
      @kissdaniel2435 Před rokem +1

      Thank you, it's awesome app...I finally have a normal window management :)

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem +1

      That's I might check it out :)

    • @MyAgOnY
      @MyAgOnY Před rokem

      I second this. Rectangle just work perfect. I work with multiple terminal and i have 0 complains! And its FOSS

    • @ScottLahteine
      @ScottLahteine Před rokem

      There is also an add-on called SizeUp to provide window placement keyboard shortcuts, and another called "Stay" to retain your window arrangement when attaching and detaching monitors and changing resolutions. Of course the built-in Spaces for multiple desktop management and split-screens is not all that bad if you only need to have some fullscreen apps and put two apps side-by-side. The new built-in Stage Manager is kind of inflexible, but it's not too bad for helping with screencasting.

    • @76williamsbh
      @76williamsbh Před rokem +2

      I think I read that Microsoft has some sort of weird patent on this feature that does not allow such a feature to be baked into this OS.

  • @techtipsuk
    @techtipsuk Před rokem +6

    Got both but never use my PC. One thing I really enjoy about MacOS is the third party apps. Simply superb.

  • @pluto202
    @pluto202 Před rokem +4

    Hi Christian, I'm on a Mac since years and working with M365 and Azure and would be happy to see some content about it. Just learned that Copy & Paste is working between devices 🙂I'm in general happy but also don't understand why they are not implementing basic stuff like the desktop management. Regards Andreas

    • @OliverBusse
      @OliverBusse Před rokem +1

      It may work from the start, but on some macOS systems it has to be enabled - this is called "hand-off"

  • @PabloPucciOK
    @PabloPucciOK Před rokem +3

    The best configuration for a better experience in MacOs:
    - System Preferences > Dock > check all checkboxes except the one at the bottom (show recently used apps on the dock)
    - System Preferences > trackpad > more gestures tab > check the Expose checkbox: Now when you have open various instances of the same app you just do three fingers down and it shows you all the instances of that app only
    - in Finder files manager : Show route, show status bar

    • @shaflic
      @shaflic Před rokem +1

      Thanks! As someone who switched a few months ago after 25 years of Windows I love every single suggestion you made here.

  • @hydrolifetech7911
    @hydrolifetech7911 Před rokem +6

    Always been a Windows user and I only a couple months ago switched to Macbook because I got into programming and its value for money, exceptional battery life and native terminal app convinced me. Got an iPhone to go with it and the portability aspect improved way more as I now heavily use the Apple Notes app to keep notes which is synced across devices and with the inter-device copy-pasting works great for me. Overall I am very satisfied and I still keep my Windows PC for games and I remote in for some other stuff I can't do on MacOS.

  • @infiniteen
    @infiniteen Před rokem +1

    I just invested in a second hand M1 Mac mini too! I like that it is low powered, and I hope to keep it on for a simple home server.

  • @OliverBusse
    @OliverBusse Před rokem +1

    Seeing you using Ventura, try hovering over the green button in the window pane and check out the pinning options. I switched to macOS 7 years ago and didn't regret it. Using it daily as my work OS, I got a company MBP16" Intel which is ok now. Bought myself a M1Pro 14" last year - this is a beast. I though have to use Windows daily due to being a HCL Notes/Domino dev and admin. Windows 10/11 runs perfectly in Parallels and also Windows 11 ARM on the M1 Pro - incl. all the HCL programs I need (32, 64 bit). A Mac means less maintenance and cumbersome updates, it just works. The integrations and the eco system (air drop, hand-off, iCloud sync etc.) is the cherry on top of the cake.

  • @RicoRojas
    @RicoRojas Před 10 měsíci

    Hey Christian, I've been love'n your channel lately & I agree with almost everything you said in this video. One thing I would like to tell you about is the BetterDisplay app. I think this app could fix the one issue you found with the display settings built into MacOS (It sure did for me). One of my favorite features (now that I finally figured out how to use it) is the ability to create dummy screens. I have created a (1600x900) dummy screen that I use to play full screen CZcams videos in a window on a vertical 1440x2560 dell screen so it's like having picture in picture for my watching. It also fixes the goofy slide bars of how big you want text as a way to choose screen size.

  • @timfarmer317
    @timfarmer317 Před rokem +1

    I switched from Linux to MacOS about 12 years ago. The look, feel, responsiveness, package management, & OpenBSD foundation offered everything I needed for work and/or entertainment. I'm happy to run Windows in a VM on both platforms but I would rather use MS Power platform software on native WinTel.

  • @bastianwegge
    @bastianwegge Před rokem +15

    There are still some things that can be mentioned in terms of OSX maturity like signing documents inside of the Preview-App, arranging PDF-Pages directly inside of the Preview-App or apps like Alfred, Raycast, Fig or SkriptKit. With OSX picking up a lot of developers (like you) the toolset will be expanded a lot more.

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem +3

      Hmm maybe there will be something about Raycast in the future, I'll check out the other Apps you have mentioned as well ;)

    • @sylviam6535
      @sylviam6535 Před rokem +1

      It’s macOS now. It has been for quite a while now.

    • @KalpeshPatel78
      @KalpeshPatel78 Před rokem +1

      Preview app is one of the best ones. You can technically do anything. Even do cutout s of some images that have a high contrast. Shift + Command + K on some images with high contrast or white background. It saves the image as a PNG for you

  • @renantmagalhaes
    @renantmagalhaes Před rokem +22

    Its definitely a user choice in the end. For several years I was a Linux hardcore user; however, now, I would not change my Windows + WSL2 integration(+ all support from my hardware out of the box) for any other system. I tried MacOS for a few months on my company computer(M1 pro, 32 GB RAM). Still, in the end, I asked them to change to a Windows machine, as I could not adapt to how Finder and the shortcuts work - as I'm a heavy shortcut user - I tried several different configurations with Karabiner. Still, it was far from what I could achieve with PowerToys + AHK on Windows. Also, the docker performance on MAC sucked for me. Idk if people know how well integrated and cross-devices windows can be, using OneDrive + Phone Link + MS keyboard on Android(for the shared clipboard), I have a pretty close experience that Apple offers, using two or three different suppliers. In my POV, the comparison is fair as MacOS needs several programs to be usable (on my workflow, like Rectangle and other programs).
    In the end, what matters is if you are happy and the SO can fulfill your needs :)

    • @CaroAbebe
      @CaroAbebe Před 9 měsíci +2

      It’s precisely the shortcuts that work across the entire system, no matter which app you use, which make me love the Mac.

    • @kickedoutonthestreets
      @kickedoutonthestreets Před 7 měsíci +2

      WSL is perfect for my needs. It lets me, as a web developer and someone aspiring to edit photos and videos, keep my workspaces distinct on a single device. I can also install multiple Linux distributions to match my deployment needs. If something goes awry (which can happen), reinstalling a distribution is a breeze. Recently I migrated to a new device, a Surface Pro, I couldn't believe how easy it is to copy my dev environments to the new device.

    • @ZombieLincoln666
      @ZombieLincoln666 Před 3 měsíci

      AHK is a mess though. It’s not easy to use at all

    • @modables
      @modables Před 2 dny

      how is it a mess lmao, it's one of the most straightforward macro softwares out there​@@ZombieLincoln666

  • @blairhickman3614
    @blairhickman3614 Před rokem +10

    I use WIndows 11, an Arch based linux distro, and Mac OS in my home and for work. I find they all have their own strong points. Mac seems to be the easiest and have the most thought out UI of the OSes I am using. The only con for Mac I can think of is games. Looking to trade my Pixel 6 pro and Garmin watch for iPhone and Apple Watch Ultra for the connectivity you highlighted. Thanks for another great video.

    • @haiz1985
      @haiz1985 Před rokem +1

      if your reason of having garmin is for running, i suggest you stay with it...

    • @blairhickman3614
      @blairhickman3614 Před rokem +1

      @@haiz1985 it is for running. (But mostly treadmill. Used with Garmin foot pod.) I love the Garmin but I am the only person in my family on Android at this point and the Apple switch would make my life easier for most things.

    • @haiz1985
      @haiz1985 Před rokem

      @@blairhickman3614 Ah ic. I have both watch and i use garmin purposely for running only and apple watch for the rest.

  • @CharlieMartorelli
    @CharlieMartorelli Před rokem +2

    I also run a second Mac mini as a home server/nas not many do this but it works well with our hose full of Macs and is very energy efficient. I have spinning disk hooked up to it via thunderbolt. I also run a few Ubuntu vm with pi hole and vpn servers. as well as cloud backs and Time Machine for the laptops.

  • @ViorelIanasi
    @ViorelIanasi Před rokem +7

    Dude, NT kernel has nothing to do with MS-DOS! :) Consumer versions of Windows had MS-DOS as an underlying system and it was 16 bit. NT kernel was from start 32 bit. First consumer version of Windows based on NT kernel was Windows XP. Windows 2000 Professional was a little approach from the earlier Windows NT versions, but then they made Windows Me which was also based on Windows 9x with had the MS-DOS system, despite the fact that it was a little buried, the options to restart in MS-DOS mode was deleted.

  • @qwertyzxaszc6323
    @qwertyzxaszc6323 Před 11 měsíci +2

    It's great to have competition. We can switch back and forth depending on which is the better computer for you at a certain point in time.

  • @dakotaburns7551
    @dakotaburns7551 Před rokem +2

    I switched to MacOS in 2006 and haven’t looked back. I concur re: terminal usage and the ecosystem that is: MacOS, iPhone, Watch, iPad, AppleTV, and speakers - they all work with each other very well!

    • @retrovox
      @retrovox Před rokem +1

      That's how Apple entraps and enslaves you.

  • @76williamsbh
    @76williamsbh Před rokem +11

    Alot of people see Macs as overpriced but when you add up the durability of the hardware, how long a Mac can last, the amount of free built in software, and the complete lack pf bloatware a Mac can be a solid longterm investment depending on your computer needs.

    • @stephanemignot100
      @stephanemignot100 Před 8 měsíci

      I was still using a 2008 iMac 6 months ago, I pushed it a bit ^

    • @SMGJohn
      @SMGJohn Před 6 měsíci

      Thats funny because I do computer repairs and Mac are the one thing we get most of and most of them go in the trash because its so difficult and expensive to repair them, Macbook Air have tendency to crack the entire screen because its so fragile around the sides.
      To replace a screen like that costs 250+ euros, thats too much for most people when the machine only cost them 800 euros brand new, they just go and buy a PC afterwards.
      A PC replacement of a similar calibre screen costs us only 120 euros, why such difference? Because Apple decided to glue the screen assembly together, its not even worth the man hours to separate it it would cost just as much as just buying the entire screen assembly from Apple repair centre.
      And usually for price of a Mac, you can get much better spec PC with serviceable memory, storage and good replacement parts that do not break bank, and while Mac have really good screens and very good speaker systems, PC has caught up like 8 years ago I mean there many good PC laptops and All-in-one systems out there.

    • @vladradu9966
      @vladradu9966 Před 6 měsíci

      Generally Macs are way too expensive when compared to PCs with the same computing power. The only plus for them is better batter life and that is the reason I've bought a Macbook Pro: to watch movies and browse the net without charging too often. To add insults to the injury, Mac are hard to repair. Repairs are either very expensive or impossible.

    • @The-Cat
      @The-Cat Před 8 dny +1

      I can hear Thinkpads laughing at your repairability 😹

    • @famousmwofficial8046
      @famousmwofficial8046 Před dnem

      Texting on my 2010 mbp running sonoma

  • @rdsii64
    @rdsii64 Před rokem +4

    I was a mac head for a long time. I eventually built a pc and went back to windows. The cheese grater mac pro was the form factor that met my needs but was so expensive I could only afford a used one. When I finally decided I wanted to work on up to date hardware the only financial was forward was to was to build a PC. I prefer the way MacOs lets me work but I don't do the Hackintosh thing. So once again I'm back on windows.

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem +2

      I totally agree with you, Mac Pro is still too expensive and old. Might change once they switch it over to Apple Silicon as well, we'll see..

  • @dedpossum66
    @dedpossum66 Před rokem +6

    Compelling case to change! I upgraded from windows with wsl2 to Ubuntu (on my laptop), and I have to say the experience is a lot nicer than working with wsl2 (though basically I was using almost exclusively wsl2). For instance my power usage is better, there is less compute 'overhead', and the tools I like to use still work (and in many cases work better). Further you can add powershell to linux in most cases which is great if you must use azure.

  • @thefrisianclause
    @thefrisianclause Před rokem +2

    Hey Christian! What is your experience with external displays with the Mac Mini/ Macbook Air? I currently have a Macbook Pro M1, connected to 2 external 1440p displays but these seem to be very blurried.. :( This makes me go back to Linux everytime.

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem +2

      I have 2x 4k Monitors from Samsung, they work great, but it's a bit weird how to set them up correctly. I ended up connecting them over USB-C and that seems to work good on my Mac M2 Pro. On the M2, I needed to add a docking station to support 2x external Monitors ,that's unfortunately just a half-baked workaround. It works but... it's not native support of the monitors.

    • @Garstonk
      @Garstonk Před rokem +1

      Have you tried Better Display or Switch Res X? They will solve the blurriness. Of course no such issue with 1440p displays using Windows!

  • @kodemasterx
    @kodemasterx Před rokem +43

    I've started using Windows since before I was a teenager, I've also been a System Admin for 5 years now, and I'm honestly ditching Windows on a personal level as well, we know MS was always intrusive but with the advent of Win 11 they completely went overboard with how much data the OS sends out without your permission. Wait till Win 12 comes around powered by their AI, it will give the term "SPYWARE" a whole new meaning...

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem +6

      Don't forget, you can always turn off personal data collection and just go with telemetry!

    • @nixxblikka
      @nixxblikka Před rokem

      You have any examples?

    • @brandonw1604
      @brandonw1604 Před rokem

      @@nixxblikka There is a CZcams video of WireShark in Win 11 and all the third party advertisers it reaches out to on a fresh install

    • @brandonw1604
      @brandonw1604 Před rokem

      I agree, I have a Win 11 ThinkPad next to me from work, they let me work on whatever I'm the most efficient on (security analyst) so I just use my Mac.

    • @kodemasterx
      @kodemasterx Před rokem +2

      @@christianlempa I understand your point but at the same time, this is something that the end-user should be made aware of, they need to ask for your permission before the OS starts to reach out to every corner of the Internet.

  • @yerunski
    @yerunski Před rokem +4

    I use both Windows 10 and on my Macbook Pro of course Mac OS. Like mentioned in the video, both OS'es have their pros and cons. The thing I dislike most about Mac OS is the Finder. To me it feels somewhat restricted compared to Windows Explorer. Also the fact that, from a full screen window, you can't minimize it to the tray with 1 click. First you have to make it smaller and then you can entirely minimize it.
    But the smoothness of the Mac, the look and feel are awesome compared to Windows. And the Retina screen you easily get used to. So crisp. Great video Christian!

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem +1

      Thank you mate! :) Had some problems with finder too, but as soon as you know the hotkeys, for making hidden files visible, openening tabs or go to location, I got used to it.

    • @bdhaliwal24
      @bdhaliwal24 Před rokem

      The Finder is horrible out of the box, for example if you want to navigate to look at files anywhere other than Downloads or Documents. Another issue with the Finder is if you go to a folder with a whole bunch of images it's a multi-step process to able to go back-and-forth to view series of images, with Windows this works much better and is more intuitive.

    • @yerunski
      @yerunski Před rokem +1

      @@bdhaliwal24 Indeed, browsing though images is a tedious job on Mac OS. You can add the images to an album and them view them one by one easy. Windows is much better by default when it comes to this.

  • @djcmike
    @djcmike Před rokem

    Been on a mac since 2004. Am quite happy with it. Works perfectly with my job as a sysadmin at an ISP.

  • @johnduffill
    @johnduffill Před rokem

    I have made and set up a hybrid setup where i have a windows desktop and then run a 16” MacBook Pro M1 Pro. Ipad , all works seamlessly once i got a virtual machine running on my windows machine and using TrueNAS scale as a NAS and sync thing to then sync all. Works perfectly. So if you are wondering try it out like that before committing fully. You will be happy

  • @thecrimsonraven707
    @thecrimsonraven707 Před rokem +1

    It was a slow process for me to switch from Windows to Mac OS. What took longest was finding equivalent applications to those I was using in Windows. To help the transition I ran a Windows virtual machine on my Mac using VMware. Now that I am fully migrated, the only time I run my Windows VM is to test Powershell cmdlets.

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem +1

      Nice, I also needed to search for a few app replacements, but I also found some new ones that are even better than the apps I was using on windows.

  • @indylawi5021
    @indylawi5021 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for sharing. I am also a big fan of Apple M1 on my MacBook Pro. just curious about your experience with Docker on M1 MacOs. this is an area to the best of my knowledge is still not natively supported on M1.

    • @bdawgsohawt
      @bdawgsohawt Před 3 měsíci

      Almost all popular apps are now natively supported on apple silicon

  • @TravisNewton1
    @TravisNewton1 Před 10 měsíci +1

    One of the things I love about macOS is that it's certified UNIX. It's great being able to write and test scripts and programs locally and then know they work with (very minor) tweaks on prod systems. And also, let's be real, the Apple Silicon is also just amazing and magic. I actually found I can use less resources than I need on x86_64. And it's so nice to not have my laptop turn into a space heater. I have to really push the M1 in my system to get it to even warm up slightly.

    • @hf2943
      @hf2943 Před 9 měsíci

      It’s amazing. I’ve had m1 MacBook Pro 13 for 2 years and have heard the fan go on like 3 times and that’s when doing extremely demanding stuff like gaming. Most of the time, even in those situations, the fan is not audible at all and the only difference is you might feel a little bit warm on the top part above the keyboard deck (where nobody touches…). But in almost all situations, it is completely cool and silent. Also regularly 15 hours + battery life. No windows device even comes close

  • @gsparkman
    @gsparkman Před rokem +19

    I began using a Mac in 1985. Believe me, Apple hadn't achieved a "hip" status at that time. I bought it because of its support built into the OS for Postscript. As a creative in an Ad agency, I saw the promise right away for technical drawing and typography-which it delivered on in the mid-80s. It took MS another 13 years to deliver a decent GUI based desktop with Windows 98. By that time the Mac was still way ahead in color management and sound. So, in my profession, I was already way entrenched in the Apple universe by the time Window's could reasonably compete in the creative process. I own and operate Windows machines as well, but not for my daily driver. I love the performance of the new Apple Silicon machines. My MacBook Pro M1 is still a beast and super-snappy.

    • @sylviam6535
      @sylviam6535 Před rokem +1

      I would argue that the first good desktop OS out of Microsoft was actually Windows 7.

    • @gsparkman
      @gsparkman Před rokem

      @@sylviam6535 I was being kind.

    • @sungmin556
      @sungmin556 Před 5 měsíci

      I have a question, if this is true why did people use windows not mac in the first place thogug? Windows dominated market for some time

    • @gsparkman
      @gsparkman Před 5 měsíci

      @@sungmin556 The answer boils down to three letters: IBM. During the birth of personal computers the most dominant company for business computing was IBM.
      The saying at the time was, "No one ever got fired for buying IBM." In 1980 IBM decided to get into personal computer business. They hired a small group of software developers headed by a Harvard dropout named: Bill Gates. MS-DOS was created for the IBM PC. Bill Gates made a brilliant business contract with IBM by not selling MS-DOS to IBM, but by licensing its use. By retaining ownership of the OS, Microsoft was able to license it to all the IBM clone manufacturers that soon followed. IBM took the "personal" out of PC and blessed it with "business" status, so that is what businesses bought, because "no one ever got fired....etc. After that, what did all those office workers buy for home? An IBM PC clone of course-the same type of computer that they used at work. That PC architecture, with Intel processors and MS-DOS (later Windows) became a hegemony that put almost every other type of PC company out of business. Apple also almost went bankrupt in the 1990's, but the Macintosh survived (barely), because it was actually a better computer for several industries.
      This enable Apple to ascend in the 2000s with the addition of the iPod, iPhone, iPad and now their new Apple Silicon based computers that have dumped Intel/AMD type processors.

  • @lucEast
    @lucEast Před rokem +1

    I switched to the MacBook Pro 14 about 5 Month ago. I wanted a powerful Notebook for productivity that also has great battery life.
    And oh boy. Just look at the build quality. I love it!

  • @madeyeQ
    @madeyeQ Před rokem

    I am considering getting a mac. Either a macbook pro or a mac mini. Not decided yet.
    What I need is to be able to run my adobe suite, as I use that professionally. If I could do that on Linux, then I wouldn't have to think about a move. But Windows has just become a hassle to work with now that MS is ruining everything.
    So do you have any experience with adobe illustrator and photoshop on Mac OS? Is it stable? (I saw some videos suggesting it crashes alot).
    For my games I will probably never be able to move away from Windows. A gaming console just don't work for me.
    Btw. I have been using both Windows and Linux since the 90's, so I am not scared of anything new, just hating all the "ads" and "here is something new" messages that are littered all over the place. (yes I also hate them on web pages)
    The only exposure I have had to Apple have been iPhones and iPads until now.

  • @anthonydhan
    @anthonydhan Před rokem +1

    Please do a video on how you are handling Docker container images compiled on your Apple silicon Mac for deployment onto cloud virtual machines still based on x86.

  • @alanjrobertson
    @alanjrobertson Před rokem +8

    I really like the M1 and M2 chips but really wasn't a fan of Mac OS when I've used it previously - granted hasn't been for a couple of years but it doesn't look like it's changed much. The deep terminal integration looks great but I found the window management incredibly annoying - I'm probably just too used to how I do things in Windows 😂 I'm also not a fan of iOS, I had an iPod Touch years ago and again the interface doesn't look vastly different now, I find stock Android works better for me. Good video though, really interesting to hear your thoughts.

    • @auralplex
      @auralplex Před rokem

      I have both. Apple is better at everything.

    • @prima6170
      @prima6170 Před 8 měsíci

      @@auralplex No it isn't. There's a plethora of stuff that Windows does better than Apple. (For a lot less money, I might add).

  • @nobodynemoq
    @nobodynemoq Před rokem +1

    That's exactly what I have: while being a linux fan, I was always struggling with Windows on laptops since there was always something wrong with linux on laptop that stopped me from switching. When I finally switched to MacOS, it was a giant relief; finally, I had linux on my servers and linux-like system on my laptop, but working perfectly 😎

  • @pavelperina7629
    @pavelperina7629 Před rokem

    Pro tip: do NOT use POWERLINE on WSL machines. I ended with some git files locked on Windows which is "fun" when you switch branch, it patches local files and fails to actually change the branch so you see many files as uncommited changes. Even more "fun" is that files are locked as long as WSL is running which is until you explicitly terminate it (wsl --shutdown)

  • @zakhounet
    @zakhounet Před rokem

    Hi Christian, First of all thanks for your great video. Following some of your recommendations I am using Proxmox and a mac mini to manage my HomeLab ;)
    I have one question as you are using both Proxmox and Mac Os, which client are you using to get connected to your Proxmox VM ? As SPice is not supported on Mac Arm and VNC is so slow ...

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem

      Thank you so much! :) I didn't run into this problem - yet. I'm mostly accessing my Linux machines over SSH only, and Windows machines over RDP. When I use Proxmox web UI, it just works on my Mac just like it did on Win.

  • @user-ml4ur2wr8b
    @user-ml4ur2wr8b Před rokem +4

    To be honest, for me the Mac OS seemed like a cut-down version of Windows. I never understood why it was better. All the advantages that are so advertised break down by the fact that Windows probably has it. Maybe something on the Mac is easier, but it is not worth all the lost features of Windows, which reveals all the power of a personal computer.

  • @jiSh
    @jiSh Před rokem

    I used WIndows growing up, but switched to Mac maybe 5 years or so ago. I have to keep up with Windows in order to support it, but thats about it. Personal & work macs are my daily drivers. Personal & work windows machines are only booted up when I need to test something or want to check some feature out.

  • @BlackhawkPilot
    @BlackhawkPilot Před 2 měsíci

    Saw my first Mac in 1984 and it was obvious that this was the way computing should be done. Have not looked back since. Have had to use WinTel machines for work but not for my personal computing. Multiple Macs, iPads, iPhones and Apple Watches in my home that just work.

  • @patricjacobsson302
    @patricjacobsson302 Před rokem

    Thanks for another great video!
    I can recommend magnet for window management. It is very similar to Windows.
    I have been using Mac together whit Promise Pegasus for many years and I can say that I just love it.

  • @nathanchapel5950
    @nathanchapel5950 Před rokem

    Thinking about switching but how did you get over the Finder navigation. It seems much harder than file explorer and how did you get used to the keyboard shortcuts? That command button is in the wrong place. Lol

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem

      You just need time to get used to it, once you only work with MacOS, Windows becomes uncomfortable :D

  • @angelopetrelli1083
    @angelopetrelli1083 Před rokem

    Cheers mate for the good video & welcome on board in the 🍏System. Your other videos will I in the nearest future, but for this video 👍⭐👍⭐👍⭐👍⭐👍⭐👍⭐👍⭐

  • @M3lagis
    @M3lagis Před 10 měsíci

    can you share what addons at what not you using with your terminal CLI? Colors looks cool, but I see that you use some kubernetes things too?
    I personally like to have iterm2 with ohmyzsh, k9s, kubectx, kubens is quite known ones, kube-ps1, fzf is nice to have also.

  • @MetehanG
    @MetehanG Před rokem +1

    I have recently switched from a Windows machine (it was a very high quality Apple knock-off device) to an M1 MBA and I could not be amazed more. The battery life around 8-10 hours even with tough workflows, the overall build quality of the machine itself, the screen and the speakers they all look and feel premium. The macOS is a really good productivity enhancer with all of its native unix CLIs and really simple and focused window management tools like Scene Manager or Mission Control that I am in love. As a developer I still have really hard dependency on Windows OS because of the dependent software projects developed for Windows and for that purpose I installed Windows for ARM on Parallels desktop which works perfectly fine for my workflows around Windows. It even pops the app windows to MacOS environment so I don't even have to bother with the Windows UI anymore even when I am using these apps (such as Visual Studio or IIS).
    Long story short, I loved the machine, I loved the OS and I am never ever going back.

    • @Teluric2
      @Teluric2 Před rokem

      Encoding and watching 4k while on M1 max ,I wait to encode prores is not more than 6 hour battery life. Tested on 3 macs encoding my addiction to drones video.

  • @Aladinzc
    @Aladinzc Před rokem

    Welcome on board :) When I got to college my friend took me to local Apple reseller and things weer decided at that moment. Compare to DOS and Win 3.1 it was something different level. Even many compatibilities problem I never owned PC for personal use. Never shelled more then 200 USD for Apple HW so you can live without Apple tax if you wanna. On other side in my little store it has simply no sense use Mac as important apps are nonexistent on macOS.

  • @Borgin_Hood
    @Borgin_Hood Před rokem +2

    I can't imagine not having a Windows device somewhere in my home but I use Apple products for all my daily needs. When I first started getting into Linux everything reminded me about MacOS in a good way so the transition was easy. I think in some ways the homelab community is sleeping on MacOS!

  • @YokoOHHNoo
    @YokoOHHNoo Před rokem +8

    As a developer using Win/Linux so far I'm pretty interested in Mac especially the new ARM ones. I like the part of having a NIX'ish experience on very low power consumption with still high performance.
    But alas in my opinion it's still too expensive. I need quite often a lot of RAM running containers or even k8s locally etc. and the price steps from 8gb to 16gb or even 32gb are really bad. Even worse you can't upgrade memory yourself in contrast to Win/Linux hardware (commonly)...
    So yeah Apple is quite appealing if money does not matter or the company pays but if you need to look for value/price I'd stick with Linux or Windows...Maybe in future I can get a Mac from my employer but switching to the whole Apple Eco system (iPhone, iWatch... still has big price tag...)

    • @sylviam6535
      @sylviam6535 Před rokem

      The upgrades from Apple (the RAM in particular) are way overpriced.

    • @oxonomy2372
      @oxonomy2372 Před rokem

      OpenCore

    • @YokoOHHNoo
      @YokoOHHNoo Před rokem

      @@oxonomy2372 And this will get me a M1/M2 in a long running small notebook for half the apple price? :D
      It's not just Mac OS I'm interested in, it's more about the hardware.

  • @84Actionjack
    @84Actionjack Před rokem +1

    Had a Hakinstosh, now have a used M1 mini rarely used. Learning Linux but have lots of Windows and Windows Server machines. I have to see just how far the Mac will take me but I doubt I'll embrace the whole Apple ecosystem despite its obvious advantages.

  • @kevin_mitchell
    @kevin_mitchell Před 7 měsíci

    I bought my first iMac in 2009 and loved it. I bought a new one in 2017. In fact the 2009 version is still going strong and I'm using it right now.

  • @kgottsman
    @kgottsman Před rokem +1

    Moved to Mac when they switched from POWER to Intel processors. Never looked back at Windows (coming from a former MCSE). Between Homebrew and a beautiful GUI that just works, its just frustration when I have to use Windows 11.

  • @DrAnimePhD
    @DrAnimePhD Před rokem

    Hey you got the Satechi Mac Mini hub! Nice touch. Is it the SSD enclosure model or just a regular hub?

  • @ahmedbakr01
    @ahmedbakr01 Před 9 měsíci

    please, how can you make the taskbar in windows 11 is a small, it's not option in the setting.

  • @branmuller
    @branmuller Před rokem +1

    I also really enjoy MacOS but still like Windows too. I have ditched both for PopOS though and not looking back on that

  • @g.s.3389
    @g.s.3389 Před rokem +1

    working in IT for 30+ years, on nearly any kind of server/pc/Os at a certain point is normal to switch to mac. I still have windows VM, Esxi, and so on, but I use apple devices, the ecosystem and inegration of devices are no match for competition, they just work, and I want to relax at home, while in my professional life I use all the rest.

  • @kharakim
    @kharakim Před 6 měsíci

    Much appreciate hearing your experience and needs as a power user vis-à-vis the Mac and Win operating systems.As a non-power user, I was exclusively using Windows through its first few iterations 95, 98, etc.) but moved over to Mac when I learned about Parallels Desktop. With the advent of the M series Macs, Parallels finally runs my text-based apps seamlessly and with no apparent loss of speed. So I have the benefit of both systems, which I need because some of my most important database foreign-language apps only run on Windows. As to comparing the look and feel of the two systems, I regard Mac as elegant and Win as a kluge. One final point as a non-power user: Mac support is world-class-best, Windows is horrible, Of course, the most important reason is that Mac makes both the OS and the hardware, while Microsoft and the hardware manufacturers can and often do point to each other as the cause of whatever your problem might be. Finally, as one who has been deep in the Apple eco-system for years, I've discovered that long after my official warranty dates have passed, Apple phone support has nonetheless continued and been terrific.

  • @NK-iw6rq
    @NK-iw6rq Před rokem

    Ive been a windows guy my whole life and about 3 years ago switched over to a MacBook Pro 2019 with the Intel chip. I have to say I am genuinely satisfied with the Mac OS experience . The user interface is clean and intuitive and I just love the little things like mission control and hot corners. Everything works and I have experience no slowdowns in the 3 years ive been using it. I look forward to getting a MacBook with Apples very own M series chip in the coming years.

    • @Teluric2
      @Teluric2 Před rokem

      4 users I know they claim they have no slowdown on their macs I found out they re liars because i asked their kids and repair techniciians.
      If macs dont get slow why there are so many tutorials how to fix slow macs?

    • @NK-iw6rq
      @NK-iw6rq Před rokem

      @@Teluric2 I guess it varies from case to case. But i commonly have several different processes running (I work in cyber security) and have yet to experience any significant slowdown. The laptop works just as good as it did when I first got it in 2020 and my one has the intel chip. The new Macs come with Apples very own M chip and they are leagues better than the intel ones. Trust me man, I come from Windows and was never on the Apple bandwagon, but I have to say this MacBook has absolutely won me over. Im going to wait for the M3 chip coming out in a year and a half to upgrade, and by then this laptop will have 4 and half years of use.

  • @voldllc9621
    @voldllc9621 Před rokem +1

    My first programming language was Lisp in 1968 and since then I have been implementing engineering and scientific numerical and real time algorithms, mainly using flavors of FORTRAN, C/C++ and Matjab. I got my hands on a Mac in 1984, and disliked it intensively since the GUI was obtuse and made it impossible for me to use the intuition and experience that I had developed over many years as an assembler and systems programmer. This changed when the MacOS was switched to a superstructure built on Berkeley Unix, since I could now switch to the familiar command line when the GUI attempted to outguess me.
    Since then I have used the Mac as my command center and remoted into the other operating system when required for my work. I am addicted to Visual Studio which does not run under all its glory on MacOS. Visual Studio Code which runs anywhere is nice, but it’s not an IDE. Finally, Windows these days is deluging me with advertising and takes me down into commercial rabbit holes if I am not careful in short circuiting the sneaky Microsoft default settings. The Mac comes without the torrents of bloatware that Windows is foisting upon us.

  • @mahmood1212
    @mahmood1212 Před rokem +2

    I did the transition recently, Mac Studio with MacOS took my desktop experience to the next level.

  • @podroznik2214
    @podroznik2214 Před rokem +1

    In MacOS Alt-Tab or rather Command-Tab switches between app not windows like on Windows or Linux. Icons on top bar cannot be hidden out of the box too

  • @rlwoodlief
    @rlwoodlief Před rokem

    I started back when a teletype was the was to communicate with mainframes. Today, I run Windows 10, (NEVER 11), MacOS, LinuxMint, iPadOS and watchOS. The only reason I still have Windows 10 is a handful of programs will only run under Windows.

  • @ajiteshkhosla12
    @ajiteshkhosla12 Před rokem

    Hi @Christian, thank you for the comparison. Interested to know which tool you are using to turn intellisense (auto-completion) in terminal. Thanks again!

  • @olafschermann1592
    @olafschermann1592 Před rokem

    I run MS SQL-Server on Debian Linux with working Windows Authentication. Also running powershell on this Linux system. Love the cross compatibility that exists for a few years. (With a little love and work)

  • @govindreddy99
    @govindreddy99 Před rokem

    i agree your most points. I just switched to mac mini m2 and just enjyoing it and exploring mac os.

  • @baba7415963
    @baba7415963 Před rokem

    What exactly are the specs of your macbook air? Did you upgrade the ram and/or ssd?
    Dont know whether i should upgrade ram

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem

      I have the best CPU config and 16GB memory with 512GB storage, it's a good config in my opinion

    • @baba7415963
      @baba7415963 Před rokem

      @@christianlempa decided to go with apple refurbished macbook pro 14in from 2021, didnt need any upgrading of anything :D

  • @magicmanj32
    @magicmanj32 Před rokem

    had a mac mini (intel) sold it because mac m1 came out......hoping to buy mac mini m2 in july.......I was playing with brew before which I liked, I love macos, windows and linux...they all have their pros and cons.....I like all their technologies

  • @szigyartom
    @szigyartom Před rokem +1

    I am using a Macbook pro 2 years now, the operating system fails miserably, I have many issues. If I started over, I would just go and install Windows on it.

  • @massimo79mmm
    @massimo79mmm Před rokem

    i did the same switching, but from windows +linux to macbook air m1 + mac mini m1

  • @cheebadigga4092
    @cheebadigga4092 Před rokem +6

    Have a look at the Nix package manager. It's basically the foundation of NixOS but it works almost everywhere else too. Not sure if it works on M1 but I would give it a shot since Linux has many ARM64 packages which should work in theory. The difference to Homebrew is that Homebrew uses official prebuilt Mac versions or provides their own prebuilt packages using the Xcode build tools while Nix just installs plain Linux packages in its own environment. Kinda like Docker but without the overhead of a separate runtime and a full-blown Linux environment, but with the advantage of versioning (like Git).

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem +1

      Hm I'm not sure why this should be an advantage over homebrew, you can tell me more please?

    • @cheebadigga4092
      @cheebadigga4092 Před rokem +1

      @@christianlempa well the advantage is you're running Linux packages on macOS. All packages which are available for NixOS are also available on macOS. So a lot more packages + a faster package manager overall.

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem +2

      @@cheebadigga4092 hmm I will check it out mate! Thank you

    • @cheebadigga4092
      @cheebadigga4092 Před rokem

      @@christianlempa You're welcome :) I'm not quite sure if it's gonna work on M1 chips, but x86_64 did work.

  • @sieraplays8735
    @sieraplays8735 Před 10 měsíci

    Very nice video. I was researching for weeks, or even months about buying my first laptop since my time at university. Anyway, I decided now to buy a MacBook Air M2 very soon. I did not find any comparable device as a windows based laptop. My options were Dell XPS13 and the Microsoft Surface 5. Now I will try the first time an Apple Device. I need to say that for long time I was against this overprized company and got annoyed whenever people around me present their new iPhone. But okay, I will try MacOS now and make the experience myself I would say :) Im curious about it

  • @dali.g
    @dali.g Před rokem +5

    I for myself am using Apple products since quite some time. In parallel at work I have to use still Windows, so I see the differences daily. Especially in combination with other Apple products, as you mentioned, there is nothing comparable out there. And now with those new Chips (and soon the new M3 will be out) they are in a league of their own.
    Btw. Automator on macOS would be something I can imagine would be worth a video ...
    Thanks for the content!

    • @sylviam6535
      @sylviam6535 Před rokem +1

      Those chips have pushed heavy x86 VM users like me off the platform, sadly.

  • @alex.prodigy
    @alex.prodigy Před rokem +2

    cool video , as others said ... you make a compelling case to switch to apple hardware :)
    btw homebrew works on linux as well :)

  • @this_time_imperfect
    @this_time_imperfect Před rokem +1

    I use both, mainly because in my industry, film and television, I need to float between the two daily. For daily emails and documents and less intense tasks I greatly prefer a Mac. But when I’m editing video I still prefer a custom built editing PC for both performance and reliability. Apple silica is a great improvement, but Apple is still up to their game of over exaggerating their performance, especially with video editing.

  • @johto
    @johto Před rokem

    Welcome to the right side ! I got my first taste of MacOS via hackintosh all the way back in 2004 (the first ones), then bought my first iMac around around Windows Vista (2007) times for my personal use. Sure, I still use Linux and Windows for work environments, but man, is it nice to come back to MacOS after work for personal use, imho it combines the best of the both worlds, the under the hood *nix stuff and the commercial desktop quality.

  • @pramarko
    @pramarko Před rokem +2

    Exactly my experience from about 10 years ago, with the exception of Apple silicon ... I still have a Windows PC, but only for gaming :D

  • @stsoul12
    @stsoul12 Před rokem

    Congrats, welcome to the club!

  • @ResoluteMujigae
    @ResoluteMujigae Před 3 měsíci

    DAWs and synths are the only things holding me back from fully ditching either Windows or Mac for Linux.

  • @entelin
    @entelin Před rokem

    There's basically 3 things I need. I do a lot of windows & linux sysadmin, some development, and gaming. For gaming you need either windows or steam/proton/wine on linux. So the vast majority of the time I'm just using linux (fedora) and window managers can be a much more efficient workflow than you can get on mac or windows. Most of the time my desktop has a browser on the left monitor, and auto tiled terminals on the other two. I basically never manually move windows anywhere. The rest of the time I need windows, either for the surprisingly few times games I'm interested in don't run on linux, or to test windows things for my consulting business.

  • @binarytech8457
    @binarytech8457 Před rokem +11

    I've switched from Windows to MacOS when M1 was introduced and I both love and hate it. Imo Windows is superior when it comes to Window and file management. Screen scaling is also much better in Windows. It's also more stable. My Mac mini m1 crashed on the first day after first reboot :D I often experience a couple of strange problems after system update. I love Mac mostly for integration with my other Apple devices and very efficient, minimalistic and silent system. Anyway I'm kind of happy with My choice and I don't have plans to switch back to Windows.

  • @shadir007
    @shadir007 Před 4 dny

    Use Magnet for MacOS. I’m sure that feature will soon be in macOS soon, but you will love that for window tiling like in windows. It was a game changer for me from that one feature I liked in Windows.

  • @Martin23673
    @Martin23673 Před rokem +1

    I got a Mac from work, but developing software for Linux on MacOS never worked well for me. The native MacOS environment is very different from a GNU/Linux system, because MacOS uses BSD tools. When I write scripts to run on Linux servers, I need a GNU/Linux environment. Windows gives me that with WSL 2, MacOS does not. I like to use Podman Machine on MacOS, but at the moment it cannot replace WSL for me.

  • @bobpage6597
    @bobpage6597 Před rokem

    One thing that I DO find a little irritating - using my Macbook on a docking station. While I can use the speakers on my external monitor with no issue, you cannot control the volume through your Mac thereafter because the feature 'Consumer Electronics Control'' has been completely disabled/removed by Apple. If I want to ensure I can adjust audio nice and easy, I have to use my Macbook speakers instead when using an external monitor. This is a minor thing Windows and even Linux does flawlessly.

  • @JAFOpty
    @JAFOpty Před rokem +1

    I like macOS but I am having issues with SMB shares with large number of files (5,000+). It takes a long time to load and display the files on Finder. On Windows is instant.

    • @Sebyllis7350k
      @Sebyllis7350k Před rokem +1

      Nothing weird on my end. My M1 Max MacBook Pro paired with 10 GbE NIC works flawlessly with TrueNAS SCALE, no matter how many files there are in one folder. For my limited understanding, I would say the situation is because your NAS is built on spinning disk and it physically takes some time to read the file, and Windows has a cache mechanism to store all the file names, and macOS doesn't? If the NAS is built with proper SSD cache this shouldn't be a problem, and your overall exp would be much better no matter it's on Windows or macOS.

    • @JAFOpty
      @JAFOpty Před rokem

      @@Sebyllis7350k yeah, there is something like that going on. Even my Android phone loads the directories over wifi5 in less than a second. I have over 40TB of data, so SSD is out of my budget at the time. I just use MS File Explorer or SSH into the server if I need to work on those directories.

  • @Andre-vn1sb
    @Andre-vn1sb Před 3 měsíci

    I switched my private Desktop Windows-PC for surfing/youtube/watching movies to M2 MacBook Air, 16GB.
    This switch was easy, and Apple hardware is far "BEST" i ever had.
    MacOS with this unix based system is great: very smooth. I dont miss anything from windows.
    But - in some cases like filemanagement windows seems to be much easier to interact with than macos on laptop.
    This dozen command/option/shift click options are mostly none intuitive, and relay complicate to remember when you could use them.

  • @KILLERTX95
    @KILLERTX95 Před rokem +2

    I work as a Linux systems admin/devops engineer. We have 6 people in the team, and all of us run Linux at work, and mac at home 😂.

    • @ernestoditerribile
      @ernestoditerribile Před rokem

      The same goes for me. Running servers, virtualization, docker containers in Linux, But I do remote into them on my MacBook. We have many workers on MacOS and Windows at the business. So I also do troubleshooting on Windows for them, or sometimes tell Mac users that things can be done differently/easier/more effective.

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem

      Lol :D

  • @FinsUp365
    @FinsUp365 Před rokem

    Can you use the new M1-M2 for cybersecurity? I’m new and keep getting told that they suck at running some tools and I’ll need a windows or Linux. When I mention VMs they say macs are buggy and I’d be missing tools

  • @NeilMendham
    @NeilMendham Před rokem +2

    Welcome to aesthetically pleasing computing that “just works”

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem +1

      Thx :D

    • @Teluric2
      @Teluric2 Před rokem

      Yeh " nobody" has issues😂

    • @NeilMendham
      @NeilMendham Před rokem

      @@Teluric2 Only people that shouldn't be using Mac's in the first place really :)

  • @keyboard_g
    @keyboard_g Před rokem +1

    NT Kernel does not have its roots in MS Dos. If anything it has its roots in VMS from DEC as it was lead by the same guy, Dave Cutler. NT is definitely not DOS and was written specifically to not be DOS as NT stands for "New Technology".
    But yes, MacOS is much nicer to work with, given its roots are BSD Unix.

  • @tom_unseen
    @tom_unseen Před 9 měsíci

    5:47 I see Obsidian there, love it 👍✌️

  • @DadJokeToke
    @DadJokeToke Před rokem

    operationally i prefer windows but my primary use is using DAW and its hard to find multidevice integration like Apple offers w Logic and Garageband im in the market fora lap or desktop and have been on the fence a while

  • @brooqs
    @brooqs Před rokem

    Dude how to deal with windows keyboard with mac? I have a steelseries keyboard and i just want to shift+insert, ctrl+x,v,c, shift+home to cursor to the begining etc. This is why i am cold with macos.

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem

      Why not buy another keyboard? Keychron makes some great ones with Mac support

  • @THEMithrandir09
    @THEMithrandir09 Před rokem +2

    Since you're a content creator that also programs/scripts macOS makes a lot of sense. For full on developers, especially those that need unusual hardware (e.g. CAN) linux is just a no-brainer imho. Everything is a file, even devices, is just too powerful. Many points you made showed that macOS "also" has this, but it doesn't seem like the experience is the same either. Though one more thing to add is that buying into the Apple infrastructure can be super expensive; even just releasing apps on the appstore is super expensive.
    All in all, reasonable choice.

    • @christianlempa
      @christianlempa  Před rokem

      Yep that's true, macOS is also great for creators!

  • @area51xi
    @area51xi Před 8 měsíci

    Drag a file from the GUI to the terminal app.... copies the file path into the app.

  • @sergiusalex
    @sergiusalex Před rokem +1

    Magnet is also an app that basically acts like the windows drag to the edge of screen.

  • @thomasherbrig4951
    @thomasherbrig4951 Před rokem

    I am using the Mac since many many years. I started with a Hackintosh because this was for me the possibility to still build my own computer from scratch. But since, I bought several Apple computers and also the other gadges from Apple like iPhone, Apple Watch, Apple TV and so on. Windows I only use for some Games like Anno 1800. I feel always lost when using Windows. There is no seamless Password management, Copy and Paste feature and Airdrop. And I need to say, since the M1 it is even better. So quick and dirt cheap. And coming back to the first point about building my own computer. Since 4 weeks I am the proud owner of a Mac Pro 5,1. Bought it on ebay, renovated and upgraded it to a nice working machine. Still worth the money. So yes. I fully agree with all you said. Great video. For me the seamless integration of Hardware and Software throughout all Apple Device makes the difference between the Windows world and the Appleworld.

  • @davidguzikowski2756
    @davidguzikowski2756 Před rokem

    try running android emulator on a windows machine and it'll come to a thermal crawl, been using Mac as a primary for ten years, the ease of terminal, and automatic python3 already installed allowed me to get up and running in no time. as a front end developer, dabbling with python and swift, the mac is hands down the best overall machine for such use.

  • @ebfsound2370
    @ebfsound2370 Před 10 měsíci

    Thank you for your info. I'm a DJ and just spilled coffee on my Asus Laptop. It had an i7b processor. Now looking into an iPad or the Air Laptop you talk about in this.