2005-01-14

Here's another market that the Mac mini will capture

People who are "tech support" for their computer-maintenance-challenged parents and other family members.

I keep hearing the refrain in reviews and commentary articles (of which there are a lot, the MM is generating quite the buzz) that the reviewers or interviewees are planning on buying one or more for their parent/children/relatives because they are tired of dealing with repairing the constant Windows virus and spyware attacks and general Windows cruft that builds up and takes out a Windows box.

Add that to the Unix techies all flying to the Mac because it is absolutely THE best Unix-oid laptop bar none AND it runs MS Office apps and all the other popular mainstream apps like Quicken and Photoshop and so on.

And there is a lot of curiousity among the other computer-techies to buy one to "check it out." I just hope most folks get it with at least 512MB RAM (another $75 from Apple or less if you do it yourself...hopefully the mail-order folks like Mac Connection and such will give you free RAM upgrades as they often do. Heck, I wouldn't be at all surprised to see the Mac mini show up in PC oriented mailorder catalogs. Apple would be stupid NOT to purchase placement for the mini there; I think they'd done so for the iMac and Xserver and stuff!)

There's also a lot of even the computer techies who want a system at home that's powerful and that they don't have to spend huge amounts of time maintaining.....because they too are tired of having to screw with Windows at work all day. I know I love to go home to my Mac from my Windows PC at work all day. Windows has it's points.....but none that don't make me far prefer the Mac. None. In fact, some of the things I like (Visual Basic for example) now have better products on the Mac....RealBasic is just as good, just as well supporte by third-party developer add-on libraries (check Versiontracker and see) and unlike VB, it's cross platform -- you can compile for MacOS X, MacOS 9, Windows, AND Linux. And soon you'll be able to develop in RealBasic on all of those platforms (or at least MacOS X, Windows, and Unix too). And it supports Windows versions back to 98 I believe.

Oh yes, the folks who make the decisions about computer purchase are about to get a wakeup call. IT folks can always use more time; I'm not so sure that making desktop computer require less support will mean they'll have any less work to do. The other folks at work always seem to be able to find more for you to do....and hopefully that "more to do" will be more fun and interesting than fighting virus and patches and spyware and other Windows crap you have to put up with. Most folks I work with use Word, Excel, a VT-100 terminal program (just use Terminal on the Mac) to connect to our Alpha minicomputer, e-mail, and a web browser. If we didn't have a bunch of databases I developed in MS-Access (the one thing that is NOT in MS Office for the Mac) then we could pull out their PC, give them an Mac mini with Office and they'd be fine. And I'm trying to move away from Access dbs, as it's too easy for people to go in and screw around with them and screw them up, switching to using VB interfacing with a database backend (preferrably Oracle or someting similar instead of a local database, with no interface they can use to screw things up.)

Oh yes, the next few months are going to be interesting....if you are thinking about a Mac mini and haven't placed your order.....you better do so NOW. It may already be too late if you want to get one anytime soon. I think we'll have them backordered for months before they even start shipping, I do.

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