Alias, on 03 October 2023 - 08:07, said:
The other nice thing about Apple stuff (besides just being fancy Unix) is if you want to resell it you can usually get a pretty good price back (not too sure the market on Guernsey, but in Sydney you can usually get about 80% of what you paid for it in the first couple of years), so if it's really not working for you you might be able to dip out without tanking too much of a loss.
Yeah, it's pretty similar over here. too
Alias, on 03 October 2023 - 08:07, said:
I was put off Macs during the last days of Intel when they got really shit, but tbh for work I've used both a M1 14" MBP and an M2 Macbook Air and they're both actually really good for dev stuff.
Agreed. The Intel Macbook I had before this, I tried to convince my boss to let me use a Windows PC because I was just so pissed off with it.
Alias, on 03 October 2023 - 08:07, said:
If you do foresee you will use it longer than for the next few years I would suggest getting ripped off and getting a RAM upgrade, it's the one that is worth it.
Yeah, I'm starting to think it makes sense to get 16GB of ram, which is what I have in my Macbook. In theory, 8GB should be fine for what I'll be doing, but it probably makes sense to future proof a little bit, given how long Macs last.
Alias, on 03 October 2023 - 08:07, said:
You probably won't run out of storage unless you're editing photos/video or need to have a bunch of virtual machines. Even then, an external USB3 drive is substantially cheaper and practically the same performance unless you're writing hundreds of thousands of tiny files over and over.
I am potentially going to be working with large images which might eat into storage, but like you say an external drive is probably fine. I've also been thinking of looking into getting a NAS too, to make it easier to share stuff between devices.
Alias, on 03 October 2023 - 08:07, said:
If you have decent familiarity with the more terminal-side of Mac OS, some of the more modern Linux distros are actually not too bad either, definitely a lot easier than Windows for most things. But if your reasoning is to avoid the tedium then that's about the opposite direction.
I am familiar with Terminal, but the latter is definitely a part of it. The other part of it, as dumb as it sounds, is the additional modifier key. At this point I couldn't do with out the additional layer of keyboard shortcuts.