5. Design. There are a huge number of computers to choose from. The only constant is change. The few Mac machines on the market are OK, but you can find lots and lots of machines running Windows, including masterpieces Mac users only can dream of.
4. Software. The “killer software” that makes a Mac worth owning (Safari, Cubase, Photoshop, Propellerheads Reason, Firefox) is perfectly available on Windows. Also, for each Mac specific application you can find, there are at least ten Windows specific alternatives.
3. Memory cost. A larger number of vendors and in some cases larger vendors, provides customer value.
2. Ease of use. Windows is well documented, logically constructed. To install an application on Windows, you download it and confirm that you want to install it. You don’t have to know what drag and drop operations that you expect to perform, and therefore, you don’t need any experience to get by. Experience gives you advantages, but is not required.
1. Customisation and extensibility. The smallest edition of the extremely powerful code editor is free to use for any purpose, and just about any Microsoft application comes with a well documented programming interface. And if you want to start from scratch, the .NET Framework is without competition. In both cases, no matter what programming language you know.


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