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I work in InDesign on a MAC. My company wants me to switch to a PC. What are some reasons I may provide to stay on MAC?
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Actually, Acrobat has (used to have?) more functionality on a PC. Can't
remember what exactly, but there was something you couldn't do on a Mac,
IIRC.
Ariel
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Luke, that's an Acrobat difference, nothing to do with ID. Last I knew, the Mac version of Acrobat didn't support Live Cycle, so was severely crippled for doing serious form work.
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This is getting off topic for InDesign.
But, since I work a lot with Acrobat:
* Beginning with Acrobat XI Pro, you can now include Office files when opening or combining files in Acrobat. (Couldn't do this in earlier versions.)
* There are still no PDF Maker plug-ins for Office for the Macintosh, so things like hyperlinks and bookmark support from Word is not yet supported.
* LifeCycle Designer is now deprecated in Acrobat Pro (isn't even included by default with the Windows version anymore). Adobe wants people to either use Acro forms (the kind we can now create from InDesign) or use FormCentral with is a cloud-based method of creating forms which works with both Mac and Windows. So Mac is now fully part of the forms world.
So it's not as bad as it used to be.
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I'm aware. The statement I replied to refered to all Adobe apps. having the same functionality.
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There are at least some more differences not mentioned in this thread:
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Just started using a PC and the differences are immediately obvious, for one, the app freezes I suppose bec it is not amped up enough PC and cannot render hi quality images, I get the grey box when I select Object menu/ display performance/high. Have not seen that since the beginnng of time bec I have used macs. Also computer crashes at LEAST once a day and then there are the dreaded updates and restarts that take forever.
Everything just takes longer on the crap PC.
Being too cheap to buy decent hardware is a major red flag to potential employees, in the end they do not actually save money
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Penny wise, but I will add that this is most certainly not a Mac vs Windows thing. It's low end hardware and you get what you pay for. You need a solid state drive, 16 GB of RAM and 7-8th gen i7.
I have no issues running any of this stuff on my desktop (self built) or my laptop (HP Spectre x360 with the above specs)
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We run multiple Macs and Windows workstations/laptops in my studio, and the features are identical across the platforms.
But we find the Windows workstations have fewer crashes than the Macs, and operate a bit faster as well. (I know I know, it's heresy to say that in this Forum!).
You do need good quality equipment on either platform; crappy equipment won't give an InDesign user the speed and stability needed.
And go into Windows Settings to control when updates are downloaded and installed. You can schedule them to happen after work hours: How to Change Windows Update Settings - dummies Don't skip Windows updates, but do control when they happen.
Seconding BobLevine​ 's hardware specs above (#31) FOR EITHER PLATFORM, not just Windows. Also needed, especially on Windows workstations/laptops:
I often buy "gamers" quality laptops for my designers because they have the RAM, processor speed, and graphics capabilities for what designers need to do. Current models use NVIDIA GE Force graphics cards. Gaming Laptops | ROG - Republic Of Gamers - ASUS USA
They look like the muscle cars of laptops tricked out with flashing lights and keyboards, but my designers actually love that glitz. Makes "work" a bit more fun.
We also are very happy with MS Surface Pros, especially their power + portability and that incredible touch screen. Compare Surface Computers & Tech Specs | Find the Right Surface For You | Surface
In any model of computer, Mac or Windows, you're looking at $1500-$3000 cost depending upon how far you deck it out.
—Bevi Chagnon
(former dealer for Apple, Asus, HP, and all the rest)
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I threw together a modest Windows machine a while back after my 2014 iMac started getting slow. I chose a 7800x, 32GB of RAM and a GTX 1070 GPU. Most importantly it has an m.2 SSD. Couldn't be happier with the performance. I even setup Windows 10 to look like my OSX desktop.
I find that it is 100% stable. Never had a crash, though my iMac has only crashed once or twice in years.
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We make a weekly magazine and some weekend newspaper supplements. Our network is not what it used to be (welcome to neocapitalism where we all have to work with less and less resources). Some of us in the layout gang use a mac and some of us use Windows 7 PCs. And you now what's the difference bewteen them? Zilch. Cero. Nada.
At home I use a MacBook Pro (enhanced with more RAM and an SSD disk, I am such an spoilt brat) and and one Windows 10 PC with more or less similar specifications. You now what's the difference? The same 0 again.
With the MacBook I have some trouble speedwise with the keyboard shorcuts but that's is because I use it less and I have not imposed myself to the discipline of that particular keyboard.
That said, keep alert if you use legacy plugins or scripts (even between versions of the same OS). There may be a rub. And if you are one of those that do not use extensions for their files just because, please, get used to them. It's dead easy.
It's 2019, pleazeeeee. forget the platform wars. They are not real.
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Yes to @Gusgsm
I'm amazed that this thread, started 6 years ago in 2013, is still going on.
END THE PLATFORM WAR!
Enough is enough. Just use whatever computer is provided at work because Mac or PC doesn't matter. What DOES matter is keeping your job!
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Yup...and since it has completely run its course, I'm locking it.