It's a Mac Mac Mac Mac World: And I'm in PC Hell
When will enterprise IT wake up and smell the advantages of giving users the platform that they want?
I'm working on a Windows XP-based ThinkPad now, and let's just say I'm less than satisfied. Colleagues of mine, also on PCs, are feeling the same. Tweeted one yesterday: "Trying to cover high-tech news with a jerry-rigged PC setup is not ideal, just sayin." I loved that. Some days, it feels like I'm racing in a NASCAR event driving a 1973 El Camino.
Look at that beauty up there. Me want that.I've worn the proverbial mock black turtleneck before: I've enjoyed plenty of Macs up until about six years ago, when my work group became all PCs, all the time. And now it's like some type of unrequited love story from a sappy movie.
Sure, I own an iPod, but it's a pretty pathetic Shuffle from the days when, I think, Woz was still on board. I'm in the market for a smartphone, but due to the lack of AT&T coverage where I reside, that iPhone 3G is officially "out."
I'm not a true fanboy or addict, especially when compared with CIO.com's Apple guru, Tom Kaneshige, who admits that he's got it bad for his iPhone. I'm more of a recovering Apple-holic who's been forced to attend an IT management detox program—a Jobsian cleansing by my company, if you will. Make no mistake: I am still tempted by the sweet Apple drug all the time.
You're probably thinking that I could just buy myself a MacBook to use, say, on the weekends for personal stuff. But, really, that would be pretty masochistic, wouldn't it?
At my sons' elementary school, there's not a PC to be found. Teachers, administrators and students (of responsible age) are all using Macs. Wireless connectivity allows them to do their schoolwork anywhere in the building. They all tote their white Apple notebooks with glee.
It'll be interesting to watch my boys' computer choices play out—Macs will abound throughout elementary and high school. Then at college, they'll probably indulge in some type of Apple device to do most of their core computing. And then what? The Real World and..."Here's your low-cost, Chinese-made PC running Windows XXVII."
What the what?
My colleague Tom has done a fair amount of writing on the costs of Macs vs. PCs in the enterprise. And here's what he writes in a recent article: "Macs in the enterprise aren't just cheaper to manage—they're a lot cheaper, according to a new survey released by the Enterprise Desktop Alliance." (For the record, I saw the receipt for my ThinkPad, and the four-figure charge on the invoice didn't seem that far south of what a Mac will run you.)
The same kind of situation occurs everyday with users and enterprise software. Users want intuitive graphical interfaces; in many cases, they still get the status quo: rigid, legacy software. (See: 5 Reasons Businesses Still Hate Enterprise Software.)

