Pleased to see so many of you making the switch. Statement of interest: I own shares in Apple, and am non-executive chairman of the largest Apple retailer in the Netherlands.
I made the switch two years ago. And I used to be a hardcore windows person. If you are a Windows person, if you haven't experienced the out-of-box experience of Apple in person, you should go and sit next to someone setting up an iMac.
The biggest hindrance to people switching to Apple is fear of the unknown. Everyone knows that buying a new Windows PC and then getting all of your old stuff from your old PC across is a two day job. First a two hour installation process of the OS after switching it on. Then making a backup DVD. Then removing all the crap demo software that they've bloated your PC with. Then installing your virus scanner, firewall etc. Then setting up your internet, e-mail account and so on. And then installing all your software again, downloading updates etc. Installing all your printer drivers. And finally rummaging around your old files and copying them across.
People then think: and that's how long it takes when I know my way around the system. They fear that it would be worse when you switch to a Mac. The reality is the opposite. You unpack it, switch it on, enter your e-mail details and 15 minute after carrying the box into your house, you can start doing productive work. (Or start messing with your music in iTunes, or your photo's in iPhoto...). That's one other big benefit: the iLife applications included with your Mac are actually very good.
And yes, you can then easily copy all your Windows files across.
I've gone so far as to not even have Microsoft Office on my Mac anymore. I've switched to Pages, Number and Keynote, since Office 2007 screwed up all the menu's I was used to with Office 2003. I have a free install of
OpenOffice for when I need it. Another big advantage: family packs. iWork costs $79, but for $99 you can install it on up to 5 Macs in your household (even if one of those Macs is in a student dorm somewhere).
I have
VirtualBox on my Mac (it's free) and in that I have an install of Windows XP for the ONE program I still run I have no replacement for (Microsoft Money, and Microsoft in its infinite wisdom has pulled that product and will not be producing updates). So when they kill that, I need a good replacement for it for the Mac, and haven't found it yet, I need good multi-currency support and good international stock market support.
Then on price, or value. If you don't value your own time, then obviously a PC will appear cheaper. However, do understand how Dell sells. They lure you with a low price, but try to upsell you at every corner. Take a relatively high end iMac, and compare screen resolutions: the 21.5" has 1920x1080 pixels. The 27" has a whopping 2560x1440 pixels. Now make sure that the Dell (or HP, or whatever) system you choose is priced with a screen with the same specification. Dell's monitor that has specs that beat Apples (at 2560x1600) costs: $1399... that's
only the monitor.
If you do that comparison meticulously, for CPU, RAM, disk space, add the antivirus software, and possibly even equivalent applications to the iLife suite, and then compare a Dell with the Apple, you'll find that the price difference is tiny. Then do the following check: on eBay, look for average prices for a 2 year old iMac. Then look for prices for a similarly equipped two year old PC. The PC will cost next to nothing, whilst the iMac will still fetch a good price. Look at it like a car. A new Mercedes is more expensive to buy, but you'd be writing off less over the life of the car.
If you're interested, currently 15,28% of our visitors use a Mac (82,71% use Windows). A couple of months ago that was less than 14%. Overall worldwide Apple marketshare is below 10%, so you can see, we already have knowledgeable users here!
Peter
(PS: another great secret... if you have all your music in iTunes, did you know that you can stream it wirelessly to a stereo system using
Airport Express, ($99) controlled by the free app for your iPhone or iPod Touch, Apple Remote? )