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Macbusiness
Macbusiness










macbusiness
  1. Macbusiness how to#
  2. Macbusiness pdf#
  3. Macbusiness upgrade#
  4. Macbusiness pro#
  5. Macbusiness windows 8#

In which case, we may as well tell the OP to say "FreeBSD is the killer app", since OS X was built with it (the Cocoa API being one of the few differentiations).īut lots of more stable, multitasking OSes competed with Windows in the 1990s. If you were a programmer/designer, then I'd have another 20 reasons for you. and even then, it's not like you can just copy all of your Automator actions over to your Windows computer like that. You can accomplish about the same thing on Windows but through many hoops like third-party applications, batch files, etc.

Macbusiness pdf#

Mac can see contents copied to Windows-formatted USB drives (NTFS, FAT, or exFAT), but Windows can't see some USB drives formatted on a Mac (HFS+)ĥ) Mac has Automator built-in, which allows you to automate some mundane tasks like batch copying files and organizing folders, creating PDF documents from photos with just two clicks of a mouse, automatically print all of the documents inside a folder, automatically inspect calendar events and then print document on a date, etc. Not everyone uses Skype.Ĥ) Some of your clients/contacts use Mac computers, and you'd like to be compatible with their workflow. into Windows is a pain in the rear.ģ) Mac has FaceTime, which allows you to easily communicate with clients and business partners who have iPhones/iPads.

Macbusiness windows 8#

Windows 8 comes with the equivalence of these, but importing your contacts, calendars, emails, reminders, notes, etc. When you have to view many PDF documents or large photos, or huge spreadsheets, being able to scroll in both dimensions (up, down, left, right) arbitrarily without having to grab the scroll bar is something you won't be able to do in Windows just yet.Ģ) Mac has built-in Contacts/Calendar/Reminders/Notes suite that allows you to organize your schedule, keep track of your life, and make sure your clients and business partners are always within just a few mouse clicks. Pretty much any application you use on Mac can be navigated with multitouch gestures. OmniPlan - for project management (but of course there is MSFT Project on Win)ġ) Mac has had multitouch gesture support for a long while now.

Macbusiness pro#

MindNode Pro - mindmapping app to think about account strategies / map out client org charts PDFPenPro - for working w/ pdf files, a lot cheaper than Adobe Acrobat TextExpander - productivity tool for typing Timeline3D - I use this to summarize contracts with customers over time, also use it to present the history of a client relationship OS X - per my statement above, reduced downtime is a great productivity argument There are parallel apps for most things, so an app-based business case might be hard to make, but here are a few on the Mac which I didn't have when I used Windows (maybe there are Win versions out there, I don't know). My time is valuable and spending unproductive hours per week waiting for my machine to be ready to work became unacceptable.

macbusiness

I'm also in sales, and bought a Mac myself b/c I simply got tired of the company-issued Dell Windows slowness and constant crashing. Perhaps not the solution you had in mind, but we can't always have our cake and eat it too. I now use my apple tv+ipad in class teaching, and macbook after school, with imac at home. I did the same because I was frustrated with my school-issued laptop. If it is purely personal preference, then consider simply buying a macbook yourself.

Macbusiness upgrade#

I am personally not a very big fan of the 13" macbook pro, finding it to be rather antiquated (unless you take the effort to upgrade it yourself).

macbusiness

If it is an air, I suppose you could still make a case based on its combination of specs, mobility and form factor.

Macbusiness how to#

What exactly is their reason for turning down your request? Are they unwilling to sponsor for a macbook when cheaper windows laptops are a dime a dozen outside? Or unwilling to learn how to service and support a second OS?Īlso, what exactly are you working as (technical sales is pretty vague), and how would your laptop factor into your workflow? If it is just basic stuff like email and word processing, heck, even a netbook or chromebook would do the job.












Macbusiness