I am not even sure I could move if I wanted to.
I have been a PC user since they were invented and am a typical teckie. I can't do most things I want to on a mac, My company VPN wont work, niether does Sage (i believe), I cant run my (propper) VOIP system on a mac (I have a Linux system for this so not Windoze), niether would my email server. Since most things I do use a computer for wont work on a mac, I have tended to stay away.
I got an IPAD2 for Christmas and I am sorry to say it bored me! I gave it away to the brother in law who seems to keep it in a cupboard!!
Maybe some other day.
Mark
Mark--
I'm no expert, but would offer that some things you say are probably just not correct.
Access to email is pretty universal on a Mac. You can use web-based mail; IMAP or POP3, right out of the box. While not as universally deployed in corporations as PCs, I'm sure there might be some other protocols implemented I just don't know about. If your email needs are so esoteric that web, POP or IMAP won't work, well one day you might have problems with a Win based system too.
VOIP? There certainly are plenty of VOIP applications for Macs. Maybe they are not the ones you are familiar with, but there are plenty.
Most mainstream independent applications are available in both Mac and PC versions, more now than ever before. Microsoft Office; Adobe Products; plenty of browsers. Yes, there are plenty of legacy applications not working on a Mac, and many engineering applications I'm told, too. But mainstream usage of a desktop computer--for word processing, design, photo work, music, video, and web browsing is very universal today.
Sure, there are plenty of applications (such as Sage's ACT!) that are legacy and not developed for multiple platforms. There is a program called Parallels, and others like it that run many (there are probably some that won't work) Windows applications. My own Macintosh has a separate hard drive that will, if I choose, boot up to a clean copy of Windows7. So, for those times when I have to run a Windows program, I have a way to do it. I set this up and have not used it, but it is there.
I moved to the Macintosh because I was tired of system crashes, constant updates that bogged down the system, virus issues. etc. I bought a 6-year old Mac, reconfigured it with a few modern tweaks, and it is solid as a rock. Even when I play with Windows on another machine I'm reminded of why I switched.
I've used both PC's and Macs since day one of each. For many years, PC's were it for me. Not any more. If nothing you do is available on a Mac, then stick with PCs.