Neapolitan Ice Cream
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- Joined
- Mar 18, 2021
- Messages
- 4,643
No idea what a 'magic keyboard' is but don't care for Apple products. I like my PC with the traditional keyboard. I find typing when using a real keyboard is much easier compared to those 'virtual' type keyboards. Apple products tend to be overpriced for simple home computing applications like email or internet surfing compared to other brands.
Tablets are not useful in any capacity for me but I can see how they are good for a very casual user.
With a Magic Keyboard, a lot of things are like using a computer with a keyboard and a trackpad, in addition to being able to use the touchscreen. I think it might even be possible to use a Bluetooth mouse. There are full suites of tools including Microsoft Office or video/photo editing tools.
But as someone else said, the file system isn't quite like that for a general purpose computer. It's really bizarre and somewhat limited.
I think that works pretty good for a lot of (probably most) people. It's nice to be able to add a wireless mouse too. I think it would be perfect for my mom who sells a lot on eBay but doesn't do a lot with file systems or anything else. I use the Adobe suite of products, manually backup all of my photos, home videos, large amounts/file sizes of work files, run things like Node and Apache, and also run a Plex Media Server so I need something more robust. Well, I should say, I did move Plex to its own dedicated Intel Nuc machine which has been working really well. I have a Chromebook that I was originally going to just use for light web browsing in the evening, but I don't really ever use it. The kids use it to look stuff up for school work though. For me it's redundant and I just use my regular laptop.
But I think a lot of people don't need $1300 laptops and something like this would be a great alternative.
There are certainly less expensive computers. A cheap laptop PC might be a good option.
But again, the file system is limited by design. Unlike a general purpose computer, Apple creates gateways where photos/videos are stored, or they're stored in specific repositories for apps.
I have an iPad, and if I save a PDF file, I have to specify if it gets saved to the "Files" directory or to open it with a specific app such as Adobe Reader. where it gets saved as app data.
There are certainly less expensive computers. A cheap laptop PC might be a good option.
But again, the file system is limited by design. Unlike a general purpose computer, Apple creates gateways where photos/videos are stored, or they're stored in specific repositories for apps.
That has been my experience as well as at work. We had both Apple & Microsoft products when PC's first started to become available. New users were generally confused about how things were stored on Apple products and would often need help to 'find' various documents they were working on which seemed to have just disappeared. Apple seemed to purposely choose different ways to do things for no apparent reason. Switching back and forth between devices was VERY confusing for the casual user. Think it is still that way today.