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Macs have gone through two major architectural changes since. The Mac and the IIc came out in the same year, and were substantially different architectures. If you want anyone informed and sensible to believe that the success of the Macintosh line (such as it is) has anything to do with the success of the Apple IIc in 1984, you'll need to make a far stronger argument than that. They each have their uses, but the most pleasant one to use for day-to-day non-IT work is the old, low-powered mac.
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I'm not a fanboi - I have an android phone, windows, linux and mac at home.

I know, its a small seemingly inconsequential thing, but it's something you do all the time. No daft drive letters which keep moving around and wreak of DOS. Put a DVD in a mac and it appears on the desktop with its name.
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Yes a Mac costs more but by the time you've bought all the software you need and brought your pc to its knees with A/V, the experience and the cost is rather unpleasant. Owners will still probably buy MS Office, but I've never seen a windows equal to ilife at those prices. Personally I think iLife + itunes make the difference. Gamers will stick to windows for the performance but the others have mac laptops and/or imacs. IT contractors are cheapskates of course and will get the Medion from Aldi. Their home machines or "personally bought" laptops are Macs. Nearly everyone I know who doesn't work in IT and gets a laptop from work runs windows. Re: The Apple compabitle is now found iin every home and office,
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IBM spent a reported $40M on PCjr marketing, but it was mostly TV and print advertisements.

That certainly matches my experience in the store, the PCjr was generally just sitting there, for much the reason Charles gives. If you wanted to spend more, there was the PC and its clones if you wanted to spend less, there were the Commodore and Atari machines.Ĭharles' basic point is that Apple did a much better job of marketing the Apple IIc *at the point of sale* than IBM did with the PCjr. There weren't any PCjr clones until the Tandy 1000, which had negligible impact.Īt the PCjr's price point, the Apple IIe and IIc were better choices for most purposes, even though they were only 8-bit machines and the Coleco Adam looked like a better choice on paper (in practice it was a disaster, with huge implementation errors). The PCjr suffered from overpricing, disillusionment (hugely hyped before release and lots of negative publicity after release), and a failure to target the correct market it was too expensive for the lower end of the home market, and inferior to the PC for the high-end home or SOHO markets. The *PCjr* was failing (though as Charles noted, it had one decent Christmas season - but not a great one), but that had nothing to do with clones. Not up on your personal computer history, are was not "'failing' at this point", and Charles never claimed they were.
