Three years ago, I loved my then-new Sony Vaio (Pentium(R) 4 CPU 2.79 GHz, 448 MB RAM), with its vibrant, luminous display and blazing speed (at least seemingly then). It succeeded a long series of PC laptops and desktops. But, after 18 years of PC use, I’m making the switch to Mac.
Why?
(1) My laptop is dying
- Disk Space Is Full. I’m out of disk space. 30 GB seemed like a lot to me in 2004. The internal hard drive was bursting at the seams, so I added an external LaCie hard drive and moved most of my media off of the laptop. Before I added the external hard drive, if I wanted to add a new application, I had to delete an old one. Yes, I could upgrade the internal hard drive, but why bother? I’m throwing the baby out with the bath water.
- It’s Breaking Down. The internal CD/DVD drive broke over a year ago. I didn’t bother fixing it, because I didn’t want to ship my laptop away for any extended period of time and I was prejudiced the cost of repair would be more than an external drive. So I bought an external combo drive. Neither the internal drive nor the replacement have worked well or allowed me to burn DVDs. Also, the fan in the laptop runs 24/7 and is loud enough to be heard in an adjacent room when the door is closed. Finally, last year, I spontaneously began experiencing complete operating system failures which miraculously healed themselves. This is a disaster waiting to happen.
- Glaciers move more quickly. See below on why I am speculating Windows is to blame.
(2) Windows is pushing me away from the PC
- Speed Degradation. I’m tired of the consistently degrading performance of my three-year-old Vaio running Windows XP. Slower and slower and slower. I’m convinced that this pattern will repeat itself with any successor PC running Windows, because it has with every other PC I’ve owned. I’m tired of having to comb through my directories to look for things to remove that might be affecting performance.
- File Clutter. I’m tired of temporary Internet files (yes, I know I can delete them). I’m tired of the myriad programs listed under “Add or Remove Programs,” half of which I don’t recognize or remember installing.
- Poor Usability. I’m tired of the time it takes me to install any new software or hardware. After I switched routers recently, it was hours and days and phone calls to technical support before I could restore Internet access to my laptop.
(3) I hear the siren call of the Mac pulling me in . . . . Clearly, this is a decision steeped in pure logic based on extensive research . . . .
- It’s pretty. The first iMacs, in their candy colors, were cute . . . too cute. How could such machines possibly be functional and powerful? The present iMacs, with their sleek minimalism, clean lines, pure white color and compact footprint so obviously are a design and engineering marvel.
- I like the commercials. I’m a recovering lawyer working in the technology industry in the Valley. Who wants to be the dork in the suit? We all want be the chill, young dude with the long hair in the jeans and t-shirt.
- It certainly seems easy to use. I mean, the commercials wouldn’t lie, would they? Plus, so many of the computer enthusiasts I know are Mac advocates (and I’m quite susceptible to the power of suggestion). I’m lured by the promise that I can just take it out of the box and plug it in and everything will work immediately and well together.
- I need only basic functionality. I figure I use my computer 90% to access the Internet, 5% for iTunes (also Internet-based) and 5% for a poker results tracking program. I’m also intending to resume using Quicken, which can rely on Internet access. Of these applications, only the poker tracking program is built only for the PC, and Apple now has software that may still allow me to use it. Given my usage, I just want easy and fast.
- It seems reliable. The notion of having to fix my PC, whatever the issue, is daunting. I have a positive belief that the presence of Apple outlets throughout the Bay Area will allow me to fix my iMac as painlessly as possible.
- It’s not all that costly. I had the notion before that Macs cost a lot more. The delta isn’t that wide, and the trade-offs are acceptable. A new 20″ iMac retails for $1499.
Yesterday, through the help of my friend Lisa O. and her friend at Apple, I ordered an iMac 20″, which arrives within the week. I’ll write soon on the out-of-box experience!

Ohmigod, don’t tell Scott. He’s got this irrational belief that Macs are better than PCs. I figure it’s too late for you as you’ve already plunked down the $$.
I think the Mac UI is actually quite hard to navigate. I’ve only ever used Windows-based PCs (with a very short stint in DOS) and the few times that I’ve tried to do something as easy as surf the Internet on a Mac, I’ve gotten stuck.
Good luck and I can’t wait to read about your experiences unpacking the box. Apparently Jobs is agro for a great “out of the box” experience.
Loyal reader that he is, he no doubt will discover this on his own!
I imagine the PC would be difficult to navigate for a novitiate, too. Remember Scott Cook’s point that usability often is a function of familiarity?
I’m going to get a cute little purple one to go with my sweater…
You’re going to have to paint it then, Scott. They only come in white for now.
JSK – once you learn the mac, it is great. But if you’ve been trained on the PC, be prepared for some angst since everything is just a little different. I got a great little PDF called switching to mac that helped a lot – I will try to find it for you.
In addition, migrating email is a pain (if you care). I migrated over 100K emails (ick!) But let me know if you need any help along the way – happy to welcome another switcher to the family!!!
I’d love to see that guide, Shri, thanks! I’m 100% Web-based now on email, so I think I’ll be okay there.
I think I’m right behind you. My Windows performance is a non-stop mystery to me, and the thought of moving to Vista, which I hear requires a ton of computing power, gives me pause and creates a perfect opportunity for a Mac to enter my life.
Joon-Soo, just remember, Steve doesn’t say the Mac interface is pretty. He says it is lickable.
I agree with the others – the hardest thing about moving from Windows to Mac is when you try to “reproduce” things you learned on Windows. Give yourself at least a few weeks of time to adjust, and pace yourself, one thing at a time.
- Adam
George – You can check mine out when you’re in town in May.
Adam – The new iMacs are a bit less lickable than the candy-colored versions, but I’ll see how it tastes.
Hey JSK
Great call on the switch. I am currently in the ‘Should I Lust or not’ (for the Mac) phase
then again, there is always the option of Ubuntu Linux (on a decent powered machine, there are tons of eye-candy possibilities there) and for once this Linux distro ‘Just works!’
Hey Murali! You lost me after the emoticon.