- Joined
- May 8, 2021
- Messages
- 1,978 (1.53/day)
- Location
- Lithuania
System Name | Shizuka |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Core i5 10400F |
Motherboard | Gigabyte B460M Aorus Pro |
Cooling | Scythe Choten |
Memory | 2x8GB G.Skill Aegis 2666 MHz |
Video Card(s) | PowerColor Red Dragon V2 RX 580 8GB ~100 watts in Wattman |
Storage | 512GB WD Blue + 256GB WD Green + 4TH Toshiba X300 |
Display(s) | BenQ BL2420PT |
Case | Cooler Master Silencio S400 |
Audio Device(s) | Topping D10 + AIWA NSX-V70 |
Power Supply | Chieftec A90 550W (GDP-550C) |
Mouse | Steel Series Rival 100 |
Keyboard | Hama SL 570 |
Software | Windows 10 Enterprise |
I think it may partly be because Macs are obnoxiously expensive and no student could possibly afford one if they were mandatory. The reality of owning a Mac is that they are very overpriced up front and they last not very long, some specific Macs get axed very faster and only support one or two Mac OS released and then become obsolete, because they are no longer officially updated and don't support anything. It may also be because my university likes to keep stuff for a long time. Most non IT faculty computers are Phenom 8000 or 9000 series machines, some others are random Sandy bridge or Haswell i3, i5s and the oldest machine in university still in use is Pentium III machine, which is in some workshop. IT faculty has one beefy machine with Cosmos II case, Core i7 Extreme CPU (probably 8 core) and two 780 Tis in SLI with 4k monitor for various most demanding work. But other machines are just some random respectable i5 or i3 things, some are AIOs with laptop specs. IT faculty also has mini hardware museum and there is some cool stuff like Pentium Pro, Macintosh 7000 something, some old ATi cards (probably pre Mach era), bunch of old less than 1GB hard drives, some obsolete storage formats and etc.Yhea, windows is perfectly serviceable for creative work, that might be a per country thing
Generally in my country perception of Macs is very poor. Most people aren't even aware of what they are, others actively hate them and think that only fools or rich people buy them and there is super tiny niche that actually buys them and then it's a Macbook, never ever an iMac or Mac mini. And even those people that have Macs some of them have a habit of stating that they do and that they are Mac people. So from this assertion we end up with rich hipsters buying Macs. Oh and most of them are also middle aged males. So middle-aged rich male hipsters, probably in mid-life crisis XD.
Oh well, my field is Environmental Sciences, but I end up having some courses from other fields. I already had Media Art, Photography, Media Studies. A bit ironically, most Mac that I saw were from social sciences. My specific courses were mostly theory and didn't really require computer much, so that might be why I never saw them.But every time that I had to use a mac for my internship I didn't have much to complain about, but most of what I do require the adobe suite and transferring images and videos (granted they were still using El Capitan, I don't think that I used the lasted versions)
I do know that macs were never popular in engineering fields due to lack of software support, but they tend to enjoy better support for design software (which also tends to become less and less true, Sketch is the only big name that I know of that made a Windows version, and there's the people who refuse to use something else beyond final cut and Logic Pro X)
Oh well, I thought that Tablet Mode was somewhat more useful for actual tablet. I remember trying out Windows 8 or 8.1 tablets in shops and they were actually pretty cool. However, on desktop that same Windows just didn't quite work, although it looked really cool.Ahh fair enough, I forgot those rugged tablets, but for illustrators, there's a glaring issue, with the tablet mode : it doesn't work with multiscreen, and it's not uncommon to use a secondary screen to display references,
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I have a kamvas 13, so I tried to use it, the tablet mode is manly showing a new start menu and rework multitasking a bit, IMHO it doesn't make up for the lack of multiscreen in graphic work... I have a hunch that this is exactly why they said that win11 new taskbar/start menu was made with touch device in mind, the current tablet mode feels so limited...it feels like that was the plan all along
View attachment 205529
Even the galaxy tab s7 can do it