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March 26, 2003 12:00 AM

PC vs. Mac Revisited: Adobe Says PCs are Faster

Windows IT Pro
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The debate between PC and Macintosh partisans over which platform performs better reached an interesting impasse this week when longtime Apple Computer partner Adobe Systems published a document on its Web site that supports claims that the PC is indeed faster. This development is interesting for two reasons. First, Apple has always used specially written Adobe applications to demonstrate the Mac's performance claims, so it's a bit problematic when the creator of those applications basically refutes the information. Second, Apple has actually responded to the claims.

Adobe's Web site (see the URL below) republished information that first appeared in July 2002--a performance comparison of a then top-of-the line 2.53GHz Dell Precision Workstation versus an equally decked-out dual-processor Power Mac G4 running at 1GHz. The single-processor Dell Precision crushed the Mac in every test; Adobe noted, "While the computers used in this study are no longer the fastest in their respective classes, the information is still valid. The PC outperformed the similar Macintosh machine, at an impressive rate." Today, the fastest PCs feature clock speeds faster than 3GHz, whereas G4-powered Macs have jumped to 1.42GHz.
 
For years, Apple has been fighting what it calls "The Megahertz Myth." On the company's Web site, Apple describes its high-end 1.42GHz Power Mac as "32 percent faster than the fastest PC on the market with a 3GHz Pentium 4 processor [when] using nine commonly used actions and filters that stress overall system performance--including processor, memory, system bus, and hard drive--in [Adobe] Photoshop." And this week, Apple responded to the Adobe site specifically. "Apple stands by our claims that our latest Power Mac systems perform equal to or better than competing PC systems," the company wrote in a statement. "The reported tests on Adobe's Web site showing slower performance of After Effects on a Mac than a PC is more an application test than a platform test and is not indicative of all Pro [nonconsumer] application performance on the Mac." Apple's claim, apparently, is that the Photoshop tests it touts are somehow more indicative of the performance of all Pro applications than are the After Effects tests that the Adobe site describes.
 
My experience with both platforms refutes that assumption. After long-term tests with several desktop and notebook Macs, the only area in which I've found any Mac to outperform any comparable PC was notebook battery life, and the Centrino chipset, which powers new Wintel-compatible notebooks, recently overcame that advantage. I'm not saying that Macs perform unacceptably for everyday tasks; even my low-end iBook works fine for such tasks as Web browsing, email, DVD playback, and light word processing. But for resource-intensive tasks (e.g., video editing, graphics work), PCs running Windows have long dominated the Mac.

Also, the increasing performance gap between Macs and PCs comes at a tough time for Apple, which is reportedly examining a replacement for the Power PC platform. Apple once touted the RISC-based Power PC as the future of computing, but the Pentium line, in which Intel has incorporated various RISC-like technologies, long ago surpassed the Power PC in performance, blurring the line between CISC and RISC architectures and ending the debate over which is superior. Apple's choices appear to come down to an IBM advance on the Power PC platform called the Power PC 970 or possibly moving to an Intel-based architecture. Whatever the company chooses, it needs to move quickly; Apple's market share continues to erode. The company's high-profile Switch campaign has proven ineffective, and changing platforms is always risky. However, the company pulled off a similar change when it moved to the Power PC platform years ago. You never know, Apple could do it again.

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Comments
  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    May 28, 2005

    Okay i have a PC... and ive used Macs.. but really ive notived that the PC run so much smoother then Macs. yes PC has more things to worry about but thats because so many people have them and more people would rather infect more people then.. only the Mac users. My friend has been telling me that PC's suck and i keep telling him only on some things they do but MY PC never gets errors... thats probally because i have so many things blocking virus's and Spyware. I NEVER get ads when i am on internet explorer or Firefox ect. I have a Mac and when i run photoshop for it the filters take so long while my 2.8 ghz PC can do that filters in less then a second. Also whats a PC without the right click button when i use a make i continually look for the right click button i go crazy lol. Idk about you guys but i think windows is more of a professional way of doing things. Macs seem like a family computer while if you want your own computer to do w/e i would get a PC cause it seems like you have more freedom. IDK if anything i said makes sense.. but i just want to get this out of my system. thanks - Bob

    P.S - Great article it was very useful

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Apr 18, 2005

    I have had my Mac G4, without any virus protection or firewall, actively engaged in internet activity as well as file sharing, for something like a year and half. It has crashed ONCE in all of that time. I write/record music in DigiDesign's ProTools 6.4. I make short films using the included iMovie software. I do graphic design of all types in Photoshop, using countless layers, effects, filters, etc.

    Ask ANY PC user how often their computer crashes and WHAT they were doing when it crashed. Compare to my story.

    Point: regardless of the stupid processing speed - Macs are faster. Speed isn't just determined by a processor or a couple of tasks. A computer's true speed is determined by the overall productivity it provides. Not crashing, not worrying about viruses eating your hard drive, not having to load drivers in order to get pictures off a camera, not loosing work due to application crashes and the time saved by having a inuitive GUI make the Mac faster any day.

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Apr 15, 2005

    Think abput this. What do children have to use in schools? MACS! & of course, and yet of course, they are so slow. They are cheap macs, and for the same price, u can get a better p.c. for the same price, or less. So in some cases macs are better than p.c.'s!

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Apr 06, 2005

    I've been an avid PC users for 10+ years, and even when I started doing graphic design about 3 years ago, I told every Mac user I knew in the industry that I am happy with Windows based machines and I see no need to switch over. Things have changed however. Even with constant maintenance, clean ups and defrags, and upgrades, my PC is getting too slow for the work I am doing. Running the amount of applications that I need to be running at once with my PC has been causing my system to consistently crash, and if it's not crashing, it likes to slow down and cause errors. Being fed up, I finally gave in and switched to a Mac. Whether or not the Mac is indeed faster in processing information, I find the stability and less slowdown to be more efficient in the long run, as I spend less time 'fixing' my Windows PC (so far I have lost about 6 days of work in the last 2 months trying to clean up and fix problems with my machine as they occur, and I have an up-to-date PC). Efficiency equals better productivity, which means more work done, and more money in my pocket.

    I am not completely for either side, as I find Windows and Macs both great systems for their own purposes, but I think it's best to judge for yourself what works best for you in whatever situation you may be in. In my case for the work I am currently doing, a Mac works best for me.

    PS: I do have a Windows-based notebook as well, so I still use both types of machines.

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Mar 29, 2005

    You guys preach macs are better than pcs because they have minimal virus and spyware activity???

    Wanna know why theres not as much spyware and viruses? I'll tell ya, it's because no one would have any fun attacking 1,000 computers :/. PCs are what like 85% of the market...OF COURSE they are gonna get attacked more.

    And listen...Anonymous switcher, it takes your comp 2 minutes to open outlook cause you got it filled with garbage. COMPUTER MAINTENANCE, you keep your comp clean it runs like a dream.

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