"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Illy is not perfect either and especially when the CS6 came out it was pretty buggy, but nowhere near what is being said about Corel. I think Illy crashes once a month on my system now. . .pierre
I go to a computer shop now and have my PC built for what I need for my graphics programs, I will agree with Brandt that buying a PC straight out the store your looking for crashes.. its going to be loaded with all kinds of junk you don't need, cuz they are making them internet ready, gaming etc.Darryl
Back when they made it, Mac Corel Draw crashed more than it did on PCs. Still, it didn't crash daily.The hardware is the same... there's no difference between the RAM, hard drives and processors... none of that is made by Apple, Dell, Alienware, etc. The difference is mostly in the operating systems. There's some interior architecture that differs, but the guts of a PC are basically the same as a Mac.A healthy system running either platform should run software without crashing all the time.
Quote from: Command-Z on June 26, 2013, 01:53:09 PMBack when they made it, Mac Corel Draw crashed more than it did on PCs. Still, it didn't crash daily.The hardware is the same... there's no difference between the RAM, hard drives and processors... none of that is made by Apple, Dell, Alienware, etc. The difference is mostly in the operating systems. There's some interior architecture that differs, but the guts of a PC are basically the same as a Mac.A healthy system running either platform should run software without crashing all the time.I agree that the components are almost the same, but there is a difference. Generic video cards can be had with nVidia chips on them and they will not be as reliable as the brand name type (in general). The issue for the most part (from my experience) is not in the individual part as they are all tested up to wazoo, but rather in how those parts interact together. This is the advantage of the Mac and workstation in my opinion. All of the hardware in those units is tested to ensure the utmost compatibility. And if some issue does come up, you can go to the manufacturer's website and download the fix rather than trying to figure out what is going on. pierre
Quote from: 3Deep on June 26, 2013, 12:12:41 PMI go to a computer shop now and have my PC built for what I need for my graphics programs, I will agree with Brandt that buying a PC straight out the store your looking for crashes.. its going to be loaded with all kinds of junk you don't need, cuz they are making them internet ready, gaming etc.DarrylI used to build and sell computers for living. Exactly the type you are talking about. I knew (while I was doing it) almost all of the vendors in the eastern US that were on that circuit (trade show) and not one of them had the trouble free computers. In part because they were too much of salesmen and not enough of computer geeks, in part because they were trying to make money, in part because they did not have the resources, so with few exceptions, white boxes bought at computer stores or shows (even the high end ones) were less reliable than the similar computers built by the big companies. One of the reasons I really like the Thinkstations is that they are $2k-$4k computers. While they might do better or worse than the other computers in that price range, the beautiful thing is the are available on used and open bos market for $500-$800. That's a fraction of the price and they still come with warranty (90 days to a year), in some cases full manufacturer's support too!pierre
But, I've had many hardware problems with Macs, they're not perfect. They do tend to last longer, but hardware reliability isn't the reason I go with Apple. I think their OS is better, more stable, faster and more intuitive... Look at Windows after every update, they keep trying to make it more like OSX. Sometimes it just doesn't work... this last one, Windows 8, is like Vista. Released way before it was fully ready.