From Gates to Jobs
From the time I started typing from what they call tactile keyboard I was oriented to the monochrome monitor that says “Starting MS-DOS...” Those we’re the old days that I can still recall. When the hard drive became available but storage was not that cheap, having a 1.6GB hard drive we’re able to install our first GUI operating system; the infamous Windows 3.1. it was amazing because you can use your mouse more than you use it in DOS. You can see windows which contain small items called icons. Icons represents an application through a small image that describes what it does. It’s not easy to guess what it do unless you double click it and launch the application.
For more than 13 years of using a computer through it’s ups and downs. Through all the crashed applications I have dealt with, to all the viruses I have cleaned and all the processors that passed for years. I still can count them and say thank you for the experience. They have taught me a lot of things, that computer technology moves so fast and moving from one platform to the other is a big decision to make. Factors needed to be considered. Maybe SHIFTING is not that bad after all as long as you know your purpose. It’s not about hating the other and loving the one you have chose but simply you want to live your computing life the way you want it to be.
For me learning the basics and experiencing the down fall of having vulnerability between hardware and software makes you appreciate something opposite to that. I’m not saying that there’s a perfect computer for all your needs but again for the purpose you have. Computer data or simply your files may somehow be important to you. Safe keeping it will be a tough job will all the viruses out there that could harm and possible damage hardware parts of you computer. Without the right protection, you could lose data which you might be gathering for a long time and destroy for a couple of hours or maybe minutes.
I think with those kind of scenario, I rather choose prevention than cure. It’s because in computing life, the time spent fixing your PC for the trouble occurred can be effectively used in learning other things. Maybe when we we’re still learning the basics of computing it’s OK to fix as may as you like, but when we talk about priceless data, I can’t risk it all.
Being a Windows user for a very long time, I know moving into Mac is a very interesting and great challenge. May not be the same experience with PC, but i expect less application crash, hardware incompatibilities, virus attacks and especially no bluescreen for sure. It’s not that difficult to switch, all you have to do is decide, try it out you might like it in the end because I may not look back of using a PC for my personal files, except for company work because I’m not the owner of the company where i work 8 hrs a day. Mac truly is out of the box machine. Not all people are made for mac but surely is mac is made for all people who wanted to have a worry free computing life, like me.
