moranphotography
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Thinking of getting a new computer and came across the Mac mini. Anyone had experience of it?
Phil
Phil
I may be the wrong person to ask, because although I've been a Mac user for the last 5 years (and a fanboi since the 90s) I think they are badly designed and the OS very poor at managing workflow. I still use a Macbook because that's what I bought and couldn't afford to ditch it - I have paid for my mistake. I've also upgraded it (4Gb RAM and a samsung SSD) to keep performance acceptable. And because Apples are now PCs like every other PC out there, I've had to re-install the OS 3 times (outside of upgrades) to maintain performance, just like you would with a windows PC.
I would think lightroom & photoshop would be OK - not spectacular, but OK. I've no idea whether a memory upgrade is possible with the latest versions, because they only have 4Gb, but if not then I would avoid because 4Gb isn't going to be enough in a couple of years time, just like the 2Gb in my Macbook wasn't enough 3 years ago. I like that they have a proper wired ethernet port, rather than wireless only like the latest macbooks.
But the cheapest is £500, the next one up is £700. On top of that you'll also need an Apple keyboard (windows keyboards aren't the same, but any mouse will do) a DVD drive and either a monitor that can take a displayport cable or you'll have to buy a dongle to convert mini displayport into VGA/DVI (and the mini DP:VGA isn't great - trust me on that). For that lot you could buy a pretty decent PC running windows or linux, maybe even in a nice mini case that would look good sat on the desk.
Really it's down to whether you want OSX in a pretty box or not, because that's the only thing a mini will really give you as a user over any other cheap, adequate PC base unit.
Sorry - I wouldn't buy it, but a lot of people feel differently.
And because Apples are now PCs like every other PC out there, I've had to re-install the OS 3 times (outside of upgrades) to maintain performance, just like you would with a windows PC
both platforms will slow down if you're (you are) permitting regular updates from the manufacturer.
sorry but, assuming youre talking about OS updates, that is balls.Fixed that for you.![]()
This is wrong. You do not need to re-install the OS to maintain performance, whether OSX or any NT kernel version of Windows.And because Apples are now PCs like every other PC out there, I've had to re-install the OS 3 times (outside of upgrades) to maintain performance, just like you would with a windows PC.
No, you won't. I have a Mac Mini (core2 duo version) and even when I was running OSX on it I did not require an apple keyboard to make it work, just a normal USB on was fine. The only pain was when I left a CD in the drive when turning it off. On powering up it then decided to try to boot from the non-bootable CD and ignored the hard disk. There is no eject button on the CD drive and the only way I could find to eject it was to borrow an Apple keyboard which has a button to do it (none of the suggested methods using a normal keyboard worked).On top of that you'll also need an Apple keyboard
The only pain was when I left a CD in the drive when turning it off. On powering up it then decided to try to boot from the non-bootable CD and ignored the hard disk. There is no eject button on the CD drive and the only way I could find to eject it was to borrow an Apple keyboard which has a button to do it (none of the suggested methods using a normal keyboard worked).
This is wrong. You do not need to re-install the OS to maintain performance, whether OSX or any NT kernel version of Windows.
No, you won't. I have a Mac Mini (core2 duo version) and even when I was running OSX on it I did not require an apple keyboard to make it work, just a normal USB on was fine. The only pain was when I left a CD in the drive when turning it off. On powering up it then decided to try to boot from the non-bootable CD and ignored the hard disk. There is no eject button on the CD drive and the only way I could find to eject it was to borrow an Apple keyboard which has a button to do it (none of the suggested methods using a normal keyboard worked).
No. The reason you've re-installed the software is not because it is a PC, just that you have, over time, installed stuff that has slowed it down. The underlying hardware knows nothing about what software is run on top of it and the fact it runs an Intel processor is immaterial - the machines themselves don't slow down, it is (as Neil put it) the crud you install that slows them..And because Apples are now PCs like every other PC out there, I've had to re-install the OS 3 times (outside of upgrades) to maintain performance, just like you would with a windows PC.
No. It is possible to maintain performance by not installing crud. All you do by not installing updates is leave the machine vulnerable to security threats. Most updates are security updates and have little to no impact on performance of the machine.It is possible to maintain performance of a windows machine by not installing updates,
No. It is possible to maintain performance by not installing crud. All you do by not installing updates is leave the machine vulnerable to security threats. Most updates are security updates and have little to no impact on performance of the machine.
Bloatware doesn't just come from manufacturers....Please re-read my posts again. I've not been running some crappy Toshiba full of manufacturer's bloatware and collapsing under the weight of 'toolbars'.
If they ever have USB drives inserted or the users have any ability to install stuff, then yes, they are vulnerable. I know many responsible adults who have no clue how to look after a computer (Mac, Windows, whatever). The updates are generally to protect people from their own stupidity. Even those around me still regularly manage to mess up their computers. They are never sure how they have done it, but it will be by clicking yes without reading what is on screen....And machines that stand alone in a work environment with responsible adults around are not vulnerable to software attacks.
And you don't see machines which are regularly updated which continue to function for years?I would never recommend a user to reject updates normally, but there are situations when updates are of no use, and in these case we see old machines that continue to function acceptably over many years.
Me, because I bought it not out of love for OSX or shinyness, but because I needed an Apple platform for iphone app development. It might be possible to cross platform develop now, but at the time there was no way to get xcode coupled with the iphone SDK to run under any kind of hacked OSX installation on a PC. I don't need an apple keyboard to type source code and I don't buy into the whole iEverything ethos that comes with owning Apple hardware and why would I buy one when I have much better (in tactile terms) keyboards already?Re: keyboards, you don't *need* an apple keyboard to run a mac, but it makes life a lot easier, just like you don't need a 20"+ monitor for image editing, but it helps. And what sort of cheapskate is going to buy a shiny mac mini, then attempt to connect up an old windows keyboard except in emergency just to save a few quid?
This is wrong. You do not need to re-install the OS to maintain performance, whether OSX or any NT kernel version of Windows.
No, you won't. I have a Mac Mini (core2 duo version) and even when I was running OSX on it I did not require an apple keyboard to make it work, just a normal USB on was fine. The only pain was when I left a CD in the drive when turning it off. On powering up it then decided to try to boot from the non-bootable CD and ignored the hard disk. There is no eject button on the CD drive and the only way I could find to eject it was to borrow an Apple keyboard which has a button to do it (none of the suggested methods using a normal keyboard worked).
Well aware, just quoting apple.neil_g - there's no Media Eject (⏏) on a non-apple keyboard. In any case sometimes those options don't work and the only answer is to insert a credit card into the superdrive slot, jamming the disc until it ejects it. It was surprising how many DVDs I could only recover like that from my Macbook until they sorted out the superdrive firmware - it used to be such a common problem magazines frequently mentioned it to help new mac users.
Bloatware doesn't just come from manufacturers....
If they ever have USB drives inserted or the users have any ability to install stuff, then yes, they are vulnerable. I know many responsible adults who have no clue how to look after a computer (Mac, Windows, whatever). The updates are generally to protect people from their own stupidity. Even those around me still regularly manage to mess up their computers. They are never sure how they have done it, but it will be by clicking yes without reading what is on screen....
And you don't see machines which are regularly updated which continue to function for years?
I'm confused on your stance though. You seem to claim that updates slow a machine, yet you always suggest people take updates. You also say that a reinstall will speed things up and given you recommend taking the updates, then I would assume the machine would be updated almost immediately to the same OS state it was before you did the reinstall (minus the accumulated crud). If updates were the cause of slowing down, wouldn't installing the updates just cause it to slow immediately, thus requiring an immediate reinstall?
Alternatively, it could just be that it's the accumulated crud causing it to slow![]()
It'll be there - there's 1001 things that don't need to be installed that do get installed by people genuinely believing they help them (network drivers are notoriously bad for adding config software which doesn't need to be there for example). Also, software expands over time which can cause performance problems if you have a system on the edge as far as memory is concerned.So the crud?
There will be a reason, but I'd be willing to bet it isn't due to updates, but without looking at the machine for either of us to identify a reason is just pure speculation. Anecdotally, I have 3 machines here that are ~3 years old (including a Dell laptop) running Windows 7 that are fine and have no perceptible slowdown. They've never been reinstalled but are kept up-to-date. Same with the machines before them. Am I just lucky?Vista was no different. A good friend bought his Dell laptop at the same time I got my Macbook, however he's not inclined to do the rebuild thing like I do. Now this is his business machine, so runs MOffice, Skype, firefox, iTunes and HP printer software. Lovely piece of kit when he got it, but 3 years down the road it's become unbearably slow. This week we discussed it, and it's just become unusable. I know what he's like as I gave him IT support for 9 years, and he's not one to add junk software to a work machine.
That's just not my experience. But if this is the case, then it's not the updates doing it, it is where the update exists on the disk. You'd expect a defrag to get you back to nominal speed. Security updates are just bug fixes and replace DLLs and executables with bug fixed versions. Unless you have really inefficient programming (which every large piece of software probably has somewhere) causing a performance degradation, the update itself can't be causing a slowdown. It must be something else.Updates are essential for security reasons for a normal user. The price of frequent updates is that they slow the system down: less if as a single large & co-ordinated update, more if applied gradually and piecemeal.
TBH I don't see machines that are regularly updated keeping going for years, no, in fact quite the opposite.
With my work laptops in the past (primarily Lenovo machines) they were running XP (off the Lenovo partition - minimal crud) the current version of office inc outlook, firefox, opera and a specialised piece of software for controlling a semi-automated analyser through an RS232 connection. On fresh install they would be lightning quick (for the day) deteriorating to reasonably responsive after all the M$ updates had been applied. Installing the apps after that didn't really change performance, but after a week they would be noticeably slower, after a month moreso and after 12 months laggy. After about 18 months they became frustrating and I would re-install mine freshly to get another year of responsiveness.
Guess we'll have to agree to disagree.