Well I got my mac in March of this year because I don't want to mess with Windows seven. I'm 47 in October. Does that mean I'm young? :) On Jun 10, 2009, at 3:16 AM, Jenny Kennedy wrote:
> > I don't know who would be counted in the "young" group and who in the > "old. I first heard rumblings that the Mac was accessable in late > 2007.I was 30 then and am 32 now, got my Mac when I was 31. So not > sure where I fit, young or old or whatever... > > My story was this. My windows computer was on it's last legs and we > knew that I had to get a new one. At first we thought about getting a > low cost windows laptop. Then they came out with vista. My partner > Larry at first didn't want to drop so much money all at once on a > computer. But I sat down and did a lot of research. Listened to > screenless switchers, joined this list, listened to everything ACB > radio had to say found other podcasts and after that I priced out how > much would it be to get a laptop with windows and a copy of JAWS. > Then I priced out the ongoing costs, upgrades to the OS and JAWS and > other things. I gathered everything I learned and presented it to > Larry. I think after all was said and done that the Mac, while > expensive at first more or less payed for it's self in the money I > saved as it had a built in screen access and screen enlargement, plus > the most I'd think of paying for os/A/T upgrades with the mac at tops > would be 150 bucks compaired to havint to spend 200 a year ontop of > the nearly 1000 starting price for a windows screen reader. Just > after we took the choice to get the Mac I got a chance to try vista as > I barrowed my stepdaughter's new vista computer. I tried timed demos > of JAWS and W.E. and the free screen readers and was so grumpy with > the whole thing. Larry got to see first hand what a pain in the neck > it all was and I even got him to listen to some of the mac demos. He > said we got the mac because it has what I need and seems to be a > better computer for me. I haven't crashed it yet and aside from a few > structure problems with the macbook, like little shards of it coming > apart where the lid shuts and the recent shorting out of the option > key I have had no trouble with it. I think people can take the choice > if they find themselves where I was. In need of a computer and free > and open to anything. I'm a stay at home mom so don't have to worry > about my mac interfacing with other computers I like my choice and am > glad I took the time to learn all I could rather than just following a > mass of people one way or the other. > > Jenny > blueskyes9112...@gmail.com > Olathe, Ks USA > > On 6/10/09, Mark Baxter <markbaxte...@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> This is typical NFB. Prey on an already oppressed popularion with >> scare tactics about what *COULD* go wrong and how helpless they'd be >> unless trhey do things the NFB way. It's why I have very little to >> do >> with organized groups of blind people. Don't feel bad; I also scoff >> at organized religion in favor of individual spirituality, and hate >> Christmas because of shopping mobs and humans in packs. Don't beieve >> what the NFB tells you; they're just anothe organization with another >> marketing angle. >> >> >> Mark BurningHawk >> >> Skype and Twitter: BurningHawk1969 >> MSN: burninghawk1...@hotmail.com >> My home page: >> http://MarkBurningHawk.net/ >> >> >>> >> > > > --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "MacVisionaries" group. To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---