Also, someone said something about smart people like their professors owning macbooks, so it must not be just for stupid people. Your professors probably didn't pay full price. Apple has a bunch of programs for teachers and educational workers that get them large discounts, and sometimes sraight up free stuff. If they did pay full price... well they're probably not computer science professors. Haha. They are probably very intelligent in their respective fields, but uninformed when it comes to personal computer technology, so they're just as easily duped by slick marketing as the average casual consumer. That's what Apple does. Their entire marketing strategy is to convince people who won't do their own research that there's something inherently special about a mac. "It's not a PC, its a mac." When, in fact, a Mac is still a PC, just with a different (inferior) operating system (and all sorts of proprietary and exclusive hardware that doesn't offer any advantages and can't be upgraded at any reasonable price).
It's just like how they made the iPod a big deal by convincing ignorant consumers that it wasn't just an MP3 player. To illustrate: a couple years ago, I was looking around an electronics store for one of those FM radio adapters, for listening to an MP3 player in a car without a tape deck. I found two different models from ******. Both plugged in with a standard 8th inch audio cable (neither was a special ipod one that used the dock plug, or anything). They were completely identical, except that one was black, and the other was white, and said "made for iPod" on the case. The "made for iPod" one was $10 more. And I saw the clerk sell someone the "made for iPod" one. Some lady came in and said she needed an FM radio adapter. The guy asked if she had an iPod, or "just an mp3 player" (his exact words). She said iPod, and he gave her the ipod one, without even mentioning the other. That's Apple's target market.
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