[Nairobi, Kenya]
AFTER SEEING the new MacBook Air and MacBook Pro machines at Elite Digital Solutions‘ (aka AppleCentre) Sarit Centre and 3D Peponi Plaza locations in the Westlands section of Nairobi , I’m now seriously contemplating ditching my plans on purchasing a Toshiba or Lenovo notebook with either an Intel Core 2 Duo or AMD 64bit chip. Damn it, but those Mac notebooks are slick, super stylish and just so yummy running its flavour of BSD Unix (Mac OS X) under the hood, which provides it with loads of power, security and scalability. Quite frankly, anyone who knows operating systems will tell you that the BSDs are vastly superior to Linux, which has been a media darling for a very long time. Oh well!!
By the way, Elite just happens to be “Kenya’s 1st Apple Reseller” according to the business card I got from Nash Bilkhu (Apple Sales & Support Executive) who happens to be a chill super kool dude that’s passionate about Mac computing.
His company also gives lots of FREE workshops on using Macs to the max…such as learning GarageBand, iLife and other kool Mac apps. How many computer stores around here actually do that?? 
Decisions, decisions…
In fact, my good pal Samantha Phillips — author of the best selling book, Blonde Ambition, and Managing Director of Bedouin Camp (Samburu, Kenya) — is interested in the MacBook Air and asked me to visit the AppleCentre and give her my unbiased opinion.
Well, although the Air is the thinnest laptop/notebook in the solar system, I still prefer the MacBook Pro. Come on Samantha, it’s just a tad heavier but you get tons of included hardware that you have to pay extra for the privilege of owing the super thin Air. On the other hand, I’d quickly steal an Air laptop from the AppleCentre if no one’s looking. I certainly wouldn’t throw it out of my bed (er off my desk)
Better than sliced bread…
What, you’re still not convinced about how amazing these MacBooks are? Then take a peek at these enticing ReviewStream MacBook reviews. Are you now convinced that these notebooks are the greatest thing since the invention of electricity, the transistor, flight, the Internet, and the Human Genome Project? I knew you’d see things my way.
Nobody’s perfect…
But alas, updates are nothing new in the PC world and I guess this is also the case on Apple’s platform. No worries though…it’s still not as bad as buggy Windows XP/2000/98/ME et al. I’ll give Vista a little credit, but it’s just annoying a lot of people right now in regards to device drivers and being too restrictive. Heck, I’d run Windows Server 2008 as a workstation OS if I were you. The word on the street is that it makes a dynamite desktop OS without all of Vista’s aches and pains. Anyhow, this article on ZDNet is a must read for all you Mac folks out there:
Oh…
I wrote here how annoyed I was with the Mac Finder. I still prefer the Windows Explorer for file management any day of the week. And you Mac folks can take that to the bank. I think it’s because of the idiotic idea of “someone” at Apple who felt that there would never, ever be a reason to have 2 buttons on the mouse.
Well, now we know how stupid that was. But I still have much respect for ya Stevie boy. So much in fact that I’d do almost anything for one of your MacBook Pros with: 17″ screen, a 2.5GHz Penryn Intel Core 2 Duo, 6MB L2 cache, 2GB RAM, 250 GB hard disk, Gigabit Ethernet, and a ton of other goodies that just makes my mouth drool. And Steve, did I tell you how sexy that metallic silver finish looks on it? Heck, forget about skirts…gimme the damn MacBook Pro…now!!!!
Happy computing!
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Related links:
- OS/X tips & tricks
- Apple Pro tips archive
- Macworld | Review: MacBook Core 2 Duo/2.1GHz and 2.4GHz
- Apple MacBook 13-inch White (Core 2 Duo) – Reviews by PC Magazine
- Electronista | Review: MacBook (early 2008)
- MacBook Air review – Engadget
- MacDevCenter.com — Top Ten Mac OS/X Tips for Unix Geeks
- OSXGuide.com :: Mac OS/X news, Mac tips, Mac tools, and free downloads
- RealBasic – easily develop powerful apps for Mac, Windows & Linux using the same source code in a powerful IDE
- The NetBSD project – the most portable free Unix OS on the planet
- The FreeBSD project – the most powerful free server/desktop Unix OS on the planet
- The OpenBSD project – the most secured free desktop/server Unix OS on the planet
- OpenSolaris – Sun Microsystem‘ free BSD Unix community offering
- PC-BSD – a free, open-source operating system based on rock-solid FreeBSD
- DesktopBSD – Pre-packaged customized FreeBSD installation with (KDE) BSD Desktop for a simple install and use replacement for Microsoft Windows
- ONLamp.com – Using DesktopBSD
- PC-BSD : A user friendly BSD flavour geared for the desktop
- OSWeekly.com – PC-BSD: The Most Beginner Friendly OS