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<blockquote data-quote="S.SubZero" data-source="post: 641795" data-attributes="member: 51635"><p>Hated Win 3.1? What alternatives to Windows were there in 1992? OS/2 1.3? Yeeks. Linux? I think Linux's market penetration at that time was "some college kids." It was also a pre-1.0 kernel, and basically unusable. DesqView/X? What? In 1992 Windows 3.1 was *the* GUI, and it's how MS got where they are. I personally used OS/2 from 1993-1996, but in those days doing desktop support in either homes or offices meant fixing Windows 3.1 machines. It was hard to 'hate' the best OS a soccer mom could use at home, then use at work.</p><p></p><p>Vista is awkward, and maybe not the best step, but none of that other stuff makes any sense. How could msconfig be a problem? It's simply an information and tweaking application. OS X has "msconfig-like" things in it, ya know. Most OS's do.</p><p></p><p></p><p>Apple's computers are made all over the place, and not every single one that rolls off an assembly line can be perfect. A facility can turn out a bad batch once in a while. It happens. Apple's resolutions to these problems can sometimes be debatable (they do seem to be ignoring the key dropping thing) but every company has these quirks. For the record, Macbook Pros run warm, and it's partially due to them being made mostly out of metal. Metal conducts heat, so the whole thing acts like a heatsink. It's not like you will be cooking eggs on them, but they do get toasty. This is a price to pay for the fact that they aren't loaded down with big heavy heatsinks inside. The size of the MBP vs. it's performance is very impressive.</p><p></p><p>I have experienced my own MBP quirks. I do see the key dropping thing from time to time, and I'm having some issues with sound scheme stuff causing the system to hiccup (like it chews up all the CPU to play a system sound). I am learning to adjust to these quirks and while I do hope they are fixed eventually, I have a feeling I'll be on my next MBP before they get resolved in these older (previous gen) ones. ; ;</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="S.SubZero, post: 641795, member: 51635"] Hated Win 3.1? What alternatives to Windows were there in 1992? OS/2 1.3? Yeeks. Linux? I think Linux's market penetration at that time was "some college kids." It was also a pre-1.0 kernel, and basically unusable. DesqView/X? What? In 1992 Windows 3.1 was *the* GUI, and it's how MS got where they are. I personally used OS/2 from 1993-1996, but in those days doing desktop support in either homes or offices meant fixing Windows 3.1 machines. It was hard to 'hate' the best OS a soccer mom could use at home, then use at work. Vista is awkward, and maybe not the best step, but none of that other stuff makes any sense. How could msconfig be a problem? It's simply an information and tweaking application. OS X has "msconfig-like" things in it, ya know. Most OS's do. Apple's computers are made all over the place, and not every single one that rolls off an assembly line can be perfect. A facility can turn out a bad batch once in a while. It happens. Apple's resolutions to these problems can sometimes be debatable (they do seem to be ignoring the key dropping thing) but every company has these quirks. For the record, Macbook Pros run warm, and it's partially due to them being made mostly out of metal. Metal conducts heat, so the whole thing acts like a heatsink. It's not like you will be cooking eggs on them, but they do get toasty. This is a price to pay for the fact that they aren't loaded down with big heavy heatsinks inside. The size of the MBP vs. it's performance is very impressive. I have experienced my own MBP quirks. I do see the key dropping thing from time to time, and I'm having some issues with sound scheme stuff causing the system to hiccup (like it chews up all the CPU to play a system sound). I am learning to adjust to these quirks and while I do hope they are fixed eventually, I have a feeling I'll be on my next MBP before they get resolved in these older (previous gen) ones. ; ; [/QUOTE]
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