andmcit wrote:I wonder how many folk are comfortably enjoying running a 2002 machine here still.
Me! I built my PC at the end of 2002 and also have a second hand (got it for free) laptop which is about 2001 I think. To be fair I to tend to run the laptop on Linux, but it also has XP on it.
My main PC still runs fine. It could do with a reinstall, but I never get round to it. I have added more memory and a disks since new, but I could have brought the PC and upgrades twice over for the price of a Mac! I expect it's performance is probably better than a Mac of the same age due to the upgrades it has had since.
And I do do some intensive stuff on it - photo, music and video manipulation all go fine on it. Even Visual Studio and SQL server run acceptably on it. I don't expect it to be as fast as a new PC, but it isn't too slow.
The thing is, windows needs maintenance. If you pay someone to do it for you then it will cost a fortune. If you find it is getting too slow and don't know how to maintain/reinstall it yourself then you end up buying a new PC and it costs a fortune. If you maintain it yourself (like an XM) then it is much cheeper than a Mac.
Yes, Macs and Linux/Unix are technically better than Windows in many ways, but Macs are more expensive to buy and there are things you can't easily do on them. For example my TV hard disk recorder could not be connected to a mac for a long time. You can now because clever people reverse engineered the windows drivers and produced Linux and Mac versions, but the community behind that is very unusual. Many things including many business applications assume a windows platform including the software I write, and there would be no market for mac versions anyway.
The reason most old PCs have trouble now is that Antivirus software assumes you will have a multi-core processor and SATA drives so they assume they can hog a whole processor and thrash the disk without you noticing. This will bring an older PC to a complete stop so you have to choose your antivirus software and settings carefully.
It is all about using the right tool for the job. Macs are the better tool for some jobs, PCs for others.