nikA wrote:
Não te esqueças que 90% dos designers e de malta ligada às industrias criativas usa e por isso tem a sua vida facilitada, mac.
Ora bem, designers e criativos, passam a vida a fazer coisas bonitas e a criar coisas novas, é normal que tivesse aparecido muita coisa.
Mito:
http://www.pcpro.co.uk/features/370543/ ... fessionalsQuote:
Video and music editing
Video editing has a die-hard Windows following, too, and although Apple has a healthy slice of the professional market (33%, according to the Institute of Videography), it’s by no means as pervasive as the product placements in TV and films would have us believe. “Although Apple makes solid, reliable kit, it isn’t very open, and there are so many different plugins and programs available on the PC that people buy into that,” says Kevin Cook, executive administrator of the Institute of Videography.
The relative cheapness of high-end components also increases Windows’ appeal to video professionals. “Since I’d invested in Windows software, you’re loathe to leave it behind, but the integration with [Adobe] Premiere on a PC and all the other programs I use makes me want to stick with the PC,” says Simon Marcus, director of video production company Addictive Media. “It’s also much cheaper, which is always a consideration.”
In music, too, we found that Macs weren’t necessarily top of the pops, with entertainment distribution and creation company Blueprint Digital using Macs only “to make sure things integrate with iTunes properly”.
In the realm of CAD, although there are programs for Macs, the professionals we spoke to used Windows to run industry-standard software such as SolidWorks.
“Any sort of CAD software is all Windows-based, pretty much across the board,” says Matt Wyre, head of systems at Haughton Design, a consultancy specialising in high-end CAD work for engineering and products. “There’s nothing suitable out there that really runs on the Mac.
Read more: Is Apple pushing away professionals? | Analysis | Features | PC Pro
http://www.pcpro.co.uk/features/370543/ ... z1b3P2KAbfQuote:
Fundamentally, clients don’t care whether you’re cooking on gas or electric – it’s about the finished product. The choice in many cases isn’t business-led, or even down to which platform is best, it’s about personal taste.
“I can see where other creative companies might have the desire to use Macs, but that’s more about the culture in the company and the people involved than an actual requirement,” says Richard Bron, CEO of Blueprint Digital. “Aside from the operating system, there’s very little that you can do on one that you can’t do on the other.”
What’s perhaps most frustrating is that the majority of creatives, given the choice, would perhaps be happiest with OS X running all their favourite applications, combined with the upgradable and cheaper PC hardware. That idea of the “Hackintosh” sounds more appealing all the time.
Read more: Is Apple pushing away professionals? | Analysis | Features | PC Pro
http://www.pcpro.co.uk/features/370543/ ... z1b3QVoxLLé mais um esquema de marketing + product placement que outra coisa. A realidade é bem diferente.
A nivel de potência de renderização 3D os apples são extremamente ineficientes. Têm um hardware caro para a potência que produzem. As aplicações engasgam e fica muito caro fazer renderizações.
Para ilustração 2D profissional, maquinas apple continuam a ser muito caras versus o desempenho. Para maquetes a mesma coisa. E um grande turnoff dos novos iMac são efectivamente os ecrãs glossy.
Se colocarmos ainda de parte a fraca costumização e capacidade de aproveitamento e expansão de hardware desactualizado, a plataforma Mac é um mau produto de produtividade nas areas criativas. O Share Mac é de
33% na area de video profissional. Ilustração é dominio CAD para windows. Em musica a vantagem é Mac. Em 3D Mac é uma risada.