2009 machine in 2016 is a 7 year old machine, not a 5 year old machine.

David Chittenden, MSc, MRCAA
Email: dchitten...@gmail.com
Mobile: +64 21 2288 288
Sent from my iPhone

> On 30/09/2016, at 02:39, Martin Brown <mbrown.bro...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> I quite honestly think that some people don't read their emails before
> responding. Nowhere in my email did I say that Apple was forcing me to
> upgrade to Sierra. The point is that I can't do so even if I desperately
> wanted to without buying a new machine. Indeed, I don't agree with something
> being forced upon anyone. I feel the reference here is towards Microsoft and
> Windows 10. Believe me I am no fan of such an approach.
> 
> However, here is an interesting point. I am running a 5-year-old desktop
> custom built machine. It has 8GB of RAM and a 1TB hard drive. Despite the
> speck remaining the same in every sense, including the CPU, Windows 10 is
> much faster than Windows 7 ever was on this machine.  
> 
> So, please feel free to lambast Microsoft. Times they deserve it, times they
> don't. I do not feel protective towards any provider of either goods or
> services. It is simply a financial transaction between them and myself.
> Long gone is the day when providers cared anything about their customers,
> and as far as I am concerned, the feeling is mutual.
> 
> Despite that however, I strongly feel that people should pay for the goods
> and services they receive. This is equally true when the goods are licenced
> software. There are those who feel it is fine to share such products with
> friends and family members in breach of very clear guidelines to the
> contrary, but the less said about that the better. Thank goodness none of my
> friends subscribe to this list.
> 
> Another responder points out that my Mini is, and will probably continue to
> function using El Capitan for a long time. I have no doubt of that and I
> have said as much myself. Macs are built too last. It defeats the purpose
> however if the hardware cannot be upgraded to match the needs of the
> software, at least to some degree, without buying a new machine.
> 
>  Here is something in my appalling ignorance that escapes me. I have a
> friend who bought a Mini at the same time as myself. An off the shelf Mac
> Mini in late 2009 had a speck of 1GB of RAM and a 128GB hard drive. He
> decided to double the Ram to 2GB and stay with the same size hard drive. I,
> on the other hand, decided on 4GB of RAM and a 500GB hard drive. As you can
> imagine the price difference was significant. Now, here is the point. He is
> also running El Capitan with absolutely no performance difference to my own
> machine. Like myself, he cannot upgrade to Sierra, but as we have both
> light-heartedly laughed, he has only been half as well screwed as I myself
> have.
> 
> So, do chill out friends. The sun still shines and the world continues to
> revolve. An almost pathological adherence to any one supplier over another
> cannot be a good thing. Apple produce a great product with great built-in
> accessibility. The weakness in their model from a consumer's perspective is
> that they provide both the hardware and the software. Although this has many
> benefits, it is not an ideal situation in one crucial area. Namely, it is
> not financially to their advantage to support hardware beyond a short time
> frame. Microsoft will be just as bad in this respect now that they have also
> got into the hardware game. Because of that, under no circumstances, will I
> purchase any of their hardware. They will use the same old flannel to
> encourage their customers to buy the latest offering so that their
> well-heeled shareholders can buy a bigger and better yacht than their
> equally well-heeled neighbours. I have a rule that I always follow when
> assimilating any information coming from a source that has a financial
> interest in that information. Don't believe everything they tell you.
> Indeed, only believe a small fraction of what they tell you, and you can't
> go wrong.
> Kind Regards:
> Martin   
> 
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