Monday, July 20, 2009

I Heart Apple


I’m not an Apple snob. I’ve never looked down my nose at PC users and I’m getting a little weary of the Apple commercials featuring that guy that Drew Barrymore used to date. Lest you think I’m lying, I present Exhibit A. For 7 years I have owned an IMac G4 that limps along so badly that it now crashes each time I try to look at a Google Map. Exhibit B is my 2GB IPod Nano that literally does not contain a song released after 2007 because I ran out of memory long ago.

I hate being forced into buying something new just because of a new operating system or because a company makes the older version so prehistoric that you literally feel like a loser for even carrying it around. So, it was with more than a little trepidation that I approached buying a new IMac for the family. I am, however, overjoyed to report (yes, I used the word overjoyed) that the experience from soup to nuts was amazing.

First, no pressure; no swarming sales people, no annoying people talking that annoying techie talk, thinking they can confuse with promises of RAM, fast processors or new ways to enhance my kids photos (yes, I did bring them with me, all of them). There was simply a lovely, twenty something girl that walked me through everything I needed to know. She then asked if I wanted my data transferred. I sheepishly pulled out my 20 ton artifact and said, yes, I would love it if she could move all of my stuff over. No problem, she said. I raised an eyebrow. Sign on the dotted line and a tech would be more than happy to help me.

When I got home, I took the monitor/CPU out of the box, plugged it into the wall, attached the USB for the keyboard to the monitor and voila! Everything was just how I left it – all of my pictures now available on their souped up version of IPhoto, all of my music ready to sync with my new IPod touched (so I splurged a little…). They even transferred over my screensaver and saved all of my bookmarks from Safari! If you think I was happy, Paul was over the moon. He thought a new computer meant the slow death march of having to learn how to do things over again. He even stayed up late making new playlists!

So, no, I won’t be carving an Apple symbol into the back of my son’s head or sticking Apple stickers on the back of my car. But, I will sing their praises to anyone that wants their computer purchase served with a side of gloriously easy.

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