I have 1 of 4 nephews starting college this fall. I said I'd buy him a laptop. His major is biomedical/pre-med (and not tech-heavy engineering or movie/sound production).
Like most kids, they want an Apple. Like most kids, my nephews love to drop Apple products. I've asked him to inquire about expected computer needs (mostly: is there any reason a PC would be better than an Apple? Is there any reason a touchscreen computer (therefore deferring to a PC) would be mandatory or preferred?). No answers yet. I know when I was in undergrad in the early 90's, engineering school strongly suggested we stick with PC's, but I'd like to think the gap has significantly closed regarding that. I'd also like to avoid any idea of using Parallels/emulators on any Mac, to be able to use a PC on a Mac, for reasons of: he's not that tech-thinking, and I'd worry about memory usage should he get a MacBook Air and 256g max SSD drive. (It's crazy how much Apple gouges you for a 512g or 1tb SSD...it's crazy how much Apple gouges you PERIOD...how much free cash do they need...).
I'm looking for general experience/comments/thoughts from parents in or having gone thru the college-student-computer-scenario here. Have you found your kids significantly benefitting from a touchscreen PC, and/or hindered in any way with having an Apple MacBook Air or Pro?
Me, I'd prefer getting him a new $400-500 max non-touchscreen PC over a $1000-1200 Apple for all the obvious reasons. More recovery room for the likely (inevitable?) drop/fail within the first 2 semesters, including more ease of easy upgrades & battery replacement (vs. the awful all-integrated nearly-impossible-to-upgrade current Apple Macs). But then there's the risk of him fouling up a PC from ???? downloads, as my personal impression after having owned Apples/Macs myself since 2006 is that: yes Macs are still better at virus rejection than PC's (feel free to correct/comment there), and unfortunately it seems like all effective PC virus/spy/gatekeeper type programs really slow down your use of the PC.
Anyway - for the typical non-engineering non-movie-producing college student, what have yinz been doing for your kids computers in undergrad? Any success or horror stories to share? Thanks in advance. Want to move on a decision in the next week or two.
Like most kids, they want an Apple. Like most kids, my nephews love to drop Apple products. I've asked him to inquire about expected computer needs (mostly: is there any reason a PC would be better than an Apple? Is there any reason a touchscreen computer (therefore deferring to a PC) would be mandatory or preferred?). No answers yet. I know when I was in undergrad in the early 90's, engineering school strongly suggested we stick with PC's, but I'd like to think the gap has significantly closed regarding that. I'd also like to avoid any idea of using Parallels/emulators on any Mac, to be able to use a PC on a Mac, for reasons of: he's not that tech-thinking, and I'd worry about memory usage should he get a MacBook Air and 256g max SSD drive. (It's crazy how much Apple gouges you for a 512g or 1tb SSD...it's crazy how much Apple gouges you PERIOD...how much free cash do they need...).
I'm looking for general experience/comments/thoughts from parents in or having gone thru the college-student-computer-scenario here. Have you found your kids significantly benefitting from a touchscreen PC, and/or hindered in any way with having an Apple MacBook Air or Pro?
Me, I'd prefer getting him a new $400-500 max non-touchscreen PC over a $1000-1200 Apple for all the obvious reasons. More recovery room for the likely (inevitable?) drop/fail within the first 2 semesters, including more ease of easy upgrades & battery replacement (vs. the awful all-integrated nearly-impossible-to-upgrade current Apple Macs). But then there's the risk of him fouling up a PC from ???? downloads, as my personal impression after having owned Apples/Macs myself since 2006 is that: yes Macs are still better at virus rejection than PC's (feel free to correct/comment there), and unfortunately it seems like all effective PC virus/spy/gatekeeper type programs really slow down your use of the PC.
Anyway - for the typical non-engineering non-movie-producing college student, what have yinz been doing for your kids computers in undergrad? Any success or horror stories to share? Thanks in advance. Want to move on a decision in the next week or two.