blogs.cnet.com — According to a recent study by research firm ChangeWave, Apple's Macintosh line of computers is well on its way to gaining a sizable portion of the computing market in the coming months. Suffice it to say, Apple is the world's best trend setter. And a world where Apple is commanding such a large portion of the market could be good for all of us.
Dec 10, 2007 View in Crawl 4
Closed AccountDec 11, 2007
Actually market share has not grown. More people are using computers and users have grown but so far, in market share, Apple has remained stagnanent. YES their users have grown but market share has remained about the same. If you dont know what I am talking about and can't do the math, then you must be a mactard.
viper244Dec 12, 2007
Exactly! So the basis for this whole article is in question. He's using an unreliable source/method. It's just another article designed to make it look like Mac are selling like crazy when they really are not. A prime example of Mac propaganda.
Closed AccountDec 13, 2007
I guess this video is also good for you apple customers then:<a class="user" href="http://digg.com/apple/Mac_vs_PC_Parody_The_Unspoken_Message_2">http://digg.com/apple/Mac_vs_PC_Parody_The_Unspoke ...</a>
Closed AccountDec 20, 2007
You can't see the source of OSX, they have almost rewrote the entire darwin kernel and close it.
webbunnyFeb 1, 2008
I know this is old but I didn't want someone calling me "out of touch" so I thought I'd reply.Please, sir, navigate to <a class="user" href="http://www.webstandards.org/action/acid2/">http://www.webstandards.org/action/acid2/</a> with IE7 and then tell me its CSS compliant.Here are some comments: "The few changes in IE 7, released in late 2006, do not bring it much closer to passing. The CSS 2 selectors and max/minWidth/Height seem to make a slight curve at the top, but still a long way off. IE is showing its age, and it has a lot of catching up to do. Sadly it is taking much longer than the other browsers, and IE will continue to drag the Web down, for as long as it remains so common."