Even though I miss the maximize button and know MS Office is easier to use on a PC, I canāt imagine switching away from Mac. I converted last summer amidst pressure from my brothers, both Mac users who pointed and laughed each time I would start up my Sony VAIO. The laughter would last anywhere from 2, to 4 minutes, chuckling at the slow, tired fan of my laptop, chugging away as if gasping for air to load 50 programs that I never used but came pre-installed anyway. And that was just the startup process.
While blogging, and patiently waiting as my laptop stalled for a good 20 seconds when I opened up MS Word and 3 tabs in an Explorer window one evening, my brother placed his arm on my shoulder and said āZainab, donāt let your computer control you. Ever since I switched to MAC, I have less stressā. I looked at him. I had a deadline for an article and had to be up at 6 am for work the next morning, and at that moment I wanted nothing more than to experience the carefree state of mind my brother had. Thatās when I decided to take the plunge and give Mac a chance.
I realized soon that just like other great forms of art, less is often more, and therein lies the genius of Apple.
Thereās no burden with my Mac. Itās given me technological autonomy to browse the web, word process, download, and organize the way I want. My PC had me living in a constant state of fear! Mac doesnāt impose hundreds of programs I have no use for or interest in. It doesnāt accuse me of committing an āillegal operation and will shut downā or crash in the middle of writing my senior thesis. It simply leaves things out. By offering less options, it gives more freedom.
Thereās a book I looked at but never fully read by Barry Schwartz entitled the Paradox of Choice describing this phenomenon. The first part went over how Americans shop for jeans. Back in the day, and by back in the day I assume the author meant the 80ās and before, purchasing jeans was a simple, mostly enjoyable activity. Today, because weāre bombarded with so many options for jeans the desire to purchase one becomes tiresome, shopping becomes a task when burdened by extraneous, often redundant options. It seemed like a somewhat convincing argument, although I think itās more applicable in the case of the Mac/PC debate.
So, on this rainy northern California winter day, I thought Iād take a moment to reflect in hindsight of a well made decision: once you go Mac, itās hard to go back š


