advantages of mac book over Vaio..?


Recommended Posts

i want to know that what are the advantages of buying apple mac book over sony vaio's which give windows vista pre-installed.

I want to know why should i consider a macbook over other laptops....?

If you're looking to use Windows Vista then why are you considering spending so much on a Macbook?

No really, what are you looking to use on a Macbook?

There is no "The MacBook is better because xxxxxxxx" explanation. Ultimately comes down to which one you prefer and which OS you prefer to use - Leopard or Vista! Go and try both and decide which you feel does the things that you want best!

i have used vista but didnt performed upto my expectations..

even xp and linux distros were good than vista..

one more question that what if i want to install linux with mac os?

willl i be able to that for my study purposes.. and what about warranty after i install linux...?

You can install linux on your mac without too much trouble. It won't affect your warranty at all.

What model of vaio are you looking at? I have been playing with a macbook and vaio sz for a while. The build quality is much better on the mac than the sony in my experience, things feel flimsy of the vaio and have broken off but the mac is untouched. The keyboard on the mac is also (for me at least) nicer to type on. The battery life on the macbook is also better but at the disadvantage of size/weight. The vaio does feel nice and light to carry around.

But like Chicane said, go and try them out, you'll know pretty quickly which is the one for you

I'd be brave enough to say that if you thought Vista was a let down but you like some distro's of Linux, you'll probably like MacOS X.

I'm an old Linux user (started back in the mid to late 90's) and whilst I admire it hugely and how far it has come, i've never really got on with it on my primary desktop simply for driver incompatibility and (on the whole) immature software. MacOS X is the ideal environment for me - pretty, with excellent hardware support and built on a UNIX core which means I can drop to a shell at any point and use commands i'm used to such as editors, network diagnostic tools (ping, etc etc), ssh/sftp client and so forth.

As I say - try em both out and see what grabs you :)

I'm an engineering student going on my 4th year soon. A Windows laptop is going to avoid a lot of pain in the future as your classes will require certain software that just won't work on a Mac unless you go out of your way. For engineering purposes a windows laptop is going to be your only option. I recommend a Dell as support is great and fast, in case you ever need it you will be happy. My Dell laptop is still functional for engineering purposes and now that I have moved off-campus I bought a desktop, which in the future you may do as well. At that point you can get a Mac :)

I'm an engineering student going on my 4th year soon. A Windows laptop is going to avoid a lot of pain in the future as your classes will require certain software that just won't work on a Mac unless you go out of your way. For engineering purposes a windows laptop is going to be your only option. I recommend a Dell as support is great and fast, in case you ever need it you will be happy. My Dell laptop is still functional for engineering purposes and now that I have moved off-campus I bought a desktop, which in the future you may do as well. At that point you can get a Mac :)

I know several engineering students here (georgia tech) with Macs. :whistle: We use a lot of Matlab--which is available on all three platforms.

for studies and laptop use, the macbook is easy and user friendly... Its great for the it just works side of things. I say that but lots of people i know try to use a macbook and they go back to a windows machine... I also know lots of friends says OMG so much easier on a mac.

It comes down to personal preference, and mine for a laptop is definitely Mac OS.

I know several engineering students here (georgia tech) with Macs. :whistle: We use a lot of Matlab--which is available on all three platforms.

we dont just use matlab...

as an engineering student, i've found that majority of cad software is either available on windows or unix. if you want to get a mac, you need to fork over a premium depending on what mac you get plus an additional $100-200 for windows to use with boot camp. engineering programs like CAD will require a good amount of resources, so using virtualization wouldn't be the best idea.

theres no real advantages of a macbook over a decent windows laptop other than os... and that just becomes a matter of preference.

we dont just use matlab...

as an engineering student, i've found that majority of cad software is either available on windows or unix. if you want to get a mac, you need to fork over a premium depending on what mac you get plus an additional $100-200 for windows to use with boot camp. engineering programs like CAD will require a good amount of resources, so using virtualization wouldn't be the best idea.

theres no real advantages of a macbook over a decent windows laptop other than os... and that just becomes a matter of preference.

Since when is a Macbook a premium? Especially with the included student deal going on with an iPod touch? Vista OEM is $100.

But you are right that cad is resource intensive and that a discrete video card is something you'd want which the Macbook doesn't offer.

Since when is a Macbook a premium? Especially with the included student deal going on with an iPod touch? Vista OEM is $100.

But you are right that cad is resource intensive and that a discrete video card is something you'd want which the Macbook doesn't offer.

well i consider something like the black macbook and the macbook pro a premium. the black macbook has an igp and costs $1500-1600 and if you want dedicated graphics you have to fork over $2000.

i cannot picture myself spending over $1500 on a laptop, let alone one that has an igp...

^^^ A Mac can easily be a "Windows laptop".

Yeah but if his just gonna use windows anyways, seem silly to get a mac THAN use windows when he can get a more bang-for-the-buck PC and use windows.

Get the Vaio, as an engineering student, getting a Mac will cause some headache mainly because of the lack of software.

well i consider something like the black macbook and the macbook pro a premium. the black macbook has an igp and costs $1500-1600 and if you want dedicated graphics you have to fork over $2000.

i cannot picture myself spending over $1500 on a laptop, let alone one that has an igp...

Blackbook is a rip--we all know that. I'd never fancy paying just for a paintjob. ;)

MBPs are a bit overpriced, but nothing out of the ordinary for what it offers to be honest. It's a very nice machine when you consider the entire package and design.

If you're an engineering student, check to see what software packages you'll need to be using. Many of them could be Windows only, and Parallels is a terrible option for some of the more processor intensive or 3D CAD apps, and I don't think anyone here can honestly say that they enjoy dual booting...

I mean, I've certainly used my fair share of Windows only stuff in various engineering classes: Xilinx's IDE for FPGA work, Any of Microchip's PIC compilers, AutoCAD, LASI, SolidWorks, various little apps a prof has thrown together for some lab, some silly toolsuite we used in a Physics lab for a DAQ, etc.

Also, If you have or can get a desktop too, I'd recommend a convertible tablet PC instead of a laptop. They're incredible for classes, and HP has the tx2500z, which is very nicely priced, especially as you can generally find a coupon for several hundred dollars off, bringing even it down to like $1200 even fully spec'd out.

Edit: Ok. Xilinx's ISE isn't Windows only. It can run on Linux, too. But not OSX.

Edited by MioTheGreat

If the required SW is only available for Windows, then there's really no point in a MB - most of the working time would be spent in Windows, and a Windows laptop can be had for less, and offer more features.

I don't know if I would go with a VAIO though either, Sony is about as expensive as Apple, but YMMV. My dad has one, and it's been reliable for him, he's had it for a couple years, and no problems. I like the new Dell Studio line, they look nice, and have good/money performance ratios.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Less powerful than a PS5 at twice the price! I wonder if they use that for marketing? Totally DoA.
    • Astra 0.6.1 Beta by Razvan Serea Astra is an audiophile music player designed for local music libraries, supporting MP3, FLAC, WAV, AAC, OGG, M4A, OPUS, WMA, AIFF, and more via FFmpeg. It offers gapless playback with pre-buffering, multichannel audio remapping, and Dolby Atmos decoding, ensuring albums play seamlessly while maintaining high-fidelity sound. Astra features real-time DSP visualizers powered by a native C++ engine, including an oscilloscope, spectrum analyzer, and vectorscope. A fully parametric 10-band EQ with live frequency response, built-in presets, and AutoEQ headphone calibration import lets you precisely shape your sound. Playback controls include shuffle, repeat, and drag-and-drop queue management, while the library automatically extracts metadata, album artwork, and supports global search, favorites, and recently played tracking. Additional features include output device selection, delay calibration, customizable themes, fullscreen and mini-player modes, Discord Rich Presence, optional Last.fm scrobbling, and an opt-in local API for integrations. Astra delivers a complete, high-quality desktop audio experience with no telemetry, accounts, or streaming. Astra 0.6.1 Beta changelog: Lyrics Initial XLRC support via @boof2015/xlrc 0.2.0 (#131) XLRC sidecar scanning, manual import, and renderer support Word timing, furigana, translations, voice labels, and translation-priority controls for XLRC Fullscreen lyrics overhaul with additional layout polish Manual lyrics editor with LRC, XLRC, and plain-text modes Drag-and-drop lyrics import plus sync offset controls Clickable synced lyrics for seeking, with popout and transport lyrics updates (#138) Fixed lyrics info sidebar scrolling (#138) Added a workaround for LRCLIB instability Metadata & Library Metadata editor rebuilt as a side panel Virtual DB metadata overrides and optional direct file tag writing Bulk metadata editing for title, artist, album, album artist, genre, year, track/disc numbers, and artwork Undo/redo support for virtual metadata edits Clear overrides action and default save-mode preference Artist page grid view added, with later design and sizing refinements Improved Jump to Playing with smart source, queue, album, artist, and library track targets Fixed smart source jump behavior Playlists Fixed VLC-style M3U import failures (#127) Added playlist export to M3U/M3U8 (#118) Improved imported playlist path resolution and missing-entry preservation Shuffle added to playlist pages (#121) Remove tracks directly from playlist views (#128) Fixed create-playlist-from-track modal closing when clicking inside it (#137) Multi-select quality-of-life fixes Right-click context menus no longer clear multiselections UI & Navigation Fixed UI scaling regressions in sidebar and home surfaces (#122, #123) Fixed transport bar regression (#126) Fixed horizontal scrolling on Home and Library rails Fixed artist grid sizing while searching Updated playlist action buttons and related layout polish Additional fullscreen lyrics visual adjustments Visualization Scopes and visualizers now respect UI scaling settings (#155) Added shared canvas sizing logic for correct DPR/backing-store behavior Canvas sizing tests added for visualizer scaling regressions Discord RPC Discord Rich Presence activity structure refactored Compact status can prioritize title or artist Profile info line can show file info or album Title and artist links can target YouTube Music, Last.fm, or be disabled Optional small Astra badge for cover-art presence Configurable “clear when paused” timing Added Discord activity tests Scrobbling Fixed custom Last.fm2 API profiles being accidentally blocked Expanded scrobbler profile protocol handling coverage Stability & Tests Added/expanded tests for XLRC parsing, lyrics presentation, metadata editor state, playlist import/export path handling, artist grid layout, horizontal scrolling, canvas sizing, and Discord RPC activity building Download: Astra 0.6.1 Beta | 138.0 MB (Open Source) View: Astra Home Page | Github | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • How does it compare to the "SeeStar S30 Pro" and the "Vespera PRO 2"?
    • Indeed. And note that those units are MUCH cheaper than this new Steam Machine...ahem.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      dorf went up a rank
      Rookie
    • First Post
      mike_rumble earned a badge
      First Post
    • Dedicated
      tuben earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      mnsgroup earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      501
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      209
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      100
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      85
    5. 5
      neufuse
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!