whatchamacallit's Profile

  • Apr 04, 2007
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Latest comments made by: whatchamacallit

  • There's a lot to look forward to, Leopard promises many improvements. There's a new iCal API, integration of notes and todo's into Mail, and an open source iCal Server (includ. Leopard Server) that can be installed on a Linux box (doesn't look to easy to setup outside of Mac OS X Leopard Server -- lots of dependencies) but iCal meetings should be a whole lot easier if you have a Mac OS X server. No complaints with that requirement, you need an MS Exchange server to do it under Windows w/Outlook. http://www.apple.com/macosx/leopard/mail.html http://www.macworld.com/2006/08/firstlooks/leoical/index.php WWDC2007 Sessions: - iCal and Calendar Store Lab - iCal Server Lab (opensource, BTW) - Integrating iCal Events and Tasks into Your Application (ical/todo API) Developers are already drooling over what they can do with the iCal Events and Tasks API in Leopard. There is a huge swelling amoung many different Mac developers to achieve the ultimate Zen GTD (Getting Things Done) environment. http://www.omnigroup.com/applications/omnifocus/ - A technological leader in the Mac world. Also checkout OmniPlan (project management) and OmniGraffle (visio like diagramming app). http://omnigroup.com/ All of this means that within a year the Mac is going to really be kicking some serious productivity butt! All the foundations are going to be in place and the developers are chomping at the bit to get going.
  • First of all, I am a hard core old school computer enthusiast, hacker, programmer, and currently employed for a fortune 100 company supporting tens of thousands of Windows PC's and servers. I have run everything, not just Windows. UNIX (Solaris/AIX), Linux, FreeBSD, NeXTStep/OpenStep, GEM/TOS, AmigaOS, OS/2, DOS/Win3x/WinNT3.51-4/Win9x/Win2k/WinME/WinXP/Win2k3/Vista Beta. I have 20+ years of experience with using, programming, administering, and supporting computers of all types. I bought my first Mac as soon as Mac OS X went 10.1 and an Apple store opened within driving distance. I never considered Apple computers to be a real computer but more a toy. That changed with Apple's purchase of NeXT and the new Mac OS X. I had experience with NeXTStep/OpenStep and I missed it. I walked into that new Apple store and spent three hours picking the salesman's mind and playing with each machine. I walked out with a TiBook 500Mhz and Mac OS X 10.1. I have since bought an iPod and Nano, as well as a PowerMac 1.0Ghz MDD with dual displays, as well as a newer AlBook 1.33Mhz. There has also been an Airport Extreme basestation and Airport Express as well. I plan to buy the second generation MacBookPro when it ships with a Core Duo 2 processor. I bought Apple because of it's UNIX core, I can run all the Linux/OpenSource/GNU stuff along side MS Office and other apps like Photoshop, etc. The second reason was the free development tools which will save me a fortune. As a bonus I now have home computers that I don't have to fix nor even run regularly scheduled maintenance (no virus definition updates, no defragmenting, no manual patching). However, since Apple switched to Intel, I have had quite a few people very interested in the ability to boot Windows and run Windows in a virtual machine. They aren't ready to buy yet but they are seriously considering it. They like the idea of migrating to a Mac while still keeping their previous PC software and hardware investment. Apple would sell more Mac's if they produce a low end PowerMac tower with a standard PC video card. i.e. no more custom Mac firmware on the video card! Gamers consist of a large market and they will switch in droves if the PowerMac was affordable, had an Intel processor, and the video card was upgradable. Gamers will reboot into a base WinXP build just to play games, after all you won't be multitasking with other apps while playing an intensive game. I think that Apples market-share will suddenly surge in the next 5 years as people wear out their older PC computers and start looking for a replacement. Apple is now a real alternative to a PC. The real draw is being able to migrate your old Windows apps as well as being virus, spyware free!
    whatchamacallit had this to say on Jul 16, 2006 Posts: 2
    Apple Market Share to Explode?