edit: plus i dont wanna possibly ruin the psp by installing a real version of mac (os 7.5) on it
Mac users?
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RyaNtheSlayA
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i know but i dont care, its fun to show off to friends (and trick the teachers into thinking your doing something productive
) I was offered a MacbookPro the other day but i decided i didnt want it, macs good and all but i already have a pc and laptop, i dont need another
edit: plus i dont wanna possibly ruin the psp by installing a real version of mac (os 7.5) on it
edit: plus i dont wanna possibly ruin the psp by installing a real version of mac (os 7.5) on it
Older. Not wiser.
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fastbilly1
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Koopin_Krackerz
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My old high school got a demo Macbook Pro that had Final Cut Pro on it. They gave it to me to see how quickly I could learn how to create and edit a movie with out any previous knowledge and if it was user friendly the program was. It's a very nice and fairly simple, takes a few hours to figure out everything, but I wouldn't spend $1400 on it unless you need all the extra stuff it has.fastbilly1 wrote:But how many Mac users have Final Cut Pro? I mean a $1400 program is not something they just throw in. Dont get me wrong it is the best way to do multicam HD editing - avid fell short on that, but I think that example is alittle extreme.
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My Consoles:
NES,Sega Genesis, Nintendo 64, Sega Dreamcast, Xbox 360, Nintendo Wii,
Gameboy Color, NeoGeo Pocket Color, Nintendo DS
My Consoles:
NES,Sega Genesis, Nintendo 64, Sega Dreamcast, Xbox 360, Nintendo Wii,
Gameboy Color, NeoGeo Pocket Color, Nintendo DS
its been a long time since i ever bought software. Its so readily available on the net and honestly, 1400? really? I'm not even remotely in their demographic for that so its not like i'm stealing. right? guys? right?... heh.Koopin_Krackerz wrote:My old high school got a demo Macbook Pro that had Final Cut Pro on it. They gave it to me to see how quickly I could learn how to create and edit a movie with out any previous knowledge and if it was user friendly the program was. It's a very nice and fairly simple, takes a few hours to figure out everything, but I wouldn't spend $1400 on it unless you need all the extra stuff it has.fastbilly1 wrote:But how many Mac users have Final Cut Pro? I mean a $1400 program is not something they just throw in. Dont get me wrong it is the best way to do multicam HD editing - avid fell short on that, but I think that example is alittle extreme.
i've been a mac user since the powerpc G5. Kinda a half mac user before that- A G4 in the studio and a pc at home. Although you can't really game on it, and there are many disadvantages to it, i find they handle photoshop really well. My last Pc actually caught fire.
You don't need final cut pro, I was just using that as an example. Every mac that comes with iLife suite (IE every-single mac that is bought brand new) can edit video off a video camera, and make a professional looking DVD to boot. (my computer illiterate auntie uses a mac and she made us a DVD with pictures and full video of her house in Australia when she came over 6 month ago, so I know it's possible). I just meant that most professionals will use that software rather than the iLife stuff.
Marurun wrote:Don’t mind-shart your pants, guys
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Koopin_Krackerz
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Yeah, the price tag was too high for me to recommend to the school and for what the school wanted (just a fairly basic video editing program) iMovie that comes with all Macs is what they should go with. I did suggest pirating Final Cut Pro, I found a copy within a few searches online, but not surprisingly a private school with a honor code wasn't to keen on that.
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My Consoles:
NES,Sega Genesis, Nintendo 64, Sega Dreamcast, Xbox 360, Nintendo Wii,
Gameboy Color, NeoGeo Pocket Color, Nintendo DS
My Consoles:
NES,Sega Genesis, Nintendo 64, Sega Dreamcast, Xbox 360, Nintendo Wii,
Gameboy Color, NeoGeo Pocket Color, Nintendo DS
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RyaNtheSlayA
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- Daniel Primed
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I'll probably be migrating to a Mac once my laptop has run its course. I'm on Windows XP and don't want to downgrade to Vista and my current XP disc is an OEM, made only for my machine.
While I do enjoy design, to be fair, design can be equally as good on either platform IMO. There are subtle advantages in using a Mac for design (such as colour and font rendering) which have aready been said but really it comes down to two things:
1) Designers like the aesthetically pleasing interface and design
2) Macs are more shortcut orientated OS' which make design work faster and are hence used in industry
The software is the same basically. Overall though Macs are of course more savvy on the creative stuff with the suites and software that comes installed etc.
While I do enjoy design, to be fair, design can be equally as good on either platform IMO. There are subtle advantages in using a Mac for design (such as colour and font rendering) which have aready been said but really it comes down to two things:
1) Designers like the aesthetically pleasing interface and design
2) Macs are more shortcut orientated OS' which make design work faster and are hence used in industry
The software is the same basically. Overall though Macs are of course more savvy on the creative stuff with the suites and software that comes installed etc.
