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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Desktop Hardware
Advice greatly appreciated: old vs new imac
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<blockquote data-quote="Raz0rEdge" data-source="post: 1462456" data-attributes="member: 110816"><p>It took me a few months to get comfortable with my Mac and be as productive as I was on my Linux machine prior to switching..but each person goes through it differently..it IS an entirely different OS with it's own quirks that you have to learn to use. </p><p></p><p>What makes the transition a LOT easier is to approach the whole thing with an open mind about what OS X does and how it does it as opposed to trying to make it do things the way Windows, Linux, what have you does things. You'll find yourself getting frustrated quickly with that approach..</p><p></p><p>By default Apple provides you with 1 year of Apple Care and you extend that for 2 more years before the first year expires. It's $169 in the US, so $100 is a great price at $50/year..you're spending a good chunk of money on the iMac, spending another $100 is a no brainer IMO...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Raz0rEdge, post: 1462456, member: 110816"] It took me a few months to get comfortable with my Mac and be as productive as I was on my Linux machine prior to switching..but each person goes through it differently..it IS an entirely different OS with it's own quirks that you have to learn to use. What makes the transition a LOT easier is to approach the whole thing with an open mind about what OS X does and how it does it as opposed to trying to make it do things the way Windows, Linux, what have you does things. You'll find yourself getting frustrated quickly with that approach.. By default Apple provides you with 1 year of Apple Care and you extend that for 2 more years before the first year expires. It's $169 in the US, so $100 is a great price at $50/year..you're spending a good chunk of money on the iMac, spending another $100 is a no brainer IMO... [/QUOTE]
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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Desktop Hardware
Advice greatly appreciated: old vs new imac
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