Saturday, February 16, 2008

More Apple For Me

I have moved more of my technological burden onto the Mac bandwagon. I recently purchased iWork, the Apple contender of Microsoft Office. A fundamental reason derived itself from a strong, altruistic principle: I do not want to support Microsoft if I do not have to.

But, that wasn't the sole deciding factor.

Glancing at the recently released Office 2008 on Amazon.com, I noticed very few enthusiastic testimonials of the product. When I checked iWork ’08, I saw many more satisfied customers. Now, many of these reviewers may have a congenital bias towards everything Bill Gates (which is a sentiment I find no fault with). Yet, the general sense I took from reviews and the product description is that iWork ’08 is an efficient, yet slightly watered-down, Office-like application. Hey, that works for me.

I consider Pages (the Mac version of Word) to be the primary component of use. I write more than I make spreadsheets and presentations. Even when I was in college (and I do hope to return to academia in the future) I was not required to utilize some unique word processing facet native only in Word. I just needed the document to save and print. iWork does this just fine.

Perhaps the most pressing concern was compatibility with Office, which is what most of the world still uses. A feature in Pages allows the user to export (i.e. change) the format into .doc. Likewise, Numbers (the Mac Excel) allows conversion to .xls and Keynote (Mac PowerPoint) into .ppt. Some users complain that the conversion is not always perfect. Fine. Point taken. However, I don’t need absolute perfection. I don’t need to send my own writing to co-workers, or anyone else, for that matter. In fact, the inherent formats of both Pages, Numbers and Keynote will probably suite me just fine.

The icing on the cake was handing the VCU employee $40 for the product. The new Mac Office 2008 version will cost non-students $140 (some students can get if for about $70). Some Office 2008 reviews I read recommend that potential buyers keep the previous version, released in 2004, rather than upgrade, it was that worthless. I chose iWork and, subsequently, Apple over the dominance of Microsoft.

Mr. Gates, if you happen to read this, don’t take my purchase personally. It’s your products that are overpriced and suck. It has no bearing on you as a person.

Friday, February 8, 2008

Where To Buy Books?

Matt Yglesias of the Atlantic wrote a post that caused some circumspection. As a book lover, I will always revere the book store, whether chain or independent. In a perfect world, I would frequent an independent seller every weekend, willfully handing over my money to support a small business owner (one day I hope to do so). As a relatively poor individual, however, I greatly appreciate the prices of Amazon.com. Amazon has done well in their attempt to translate the book store experience into an online format (whoever came up with the idea to scan select pages of each book so that the online shopper can "flip" through a potential purchase was well to do so). If I hear about a book or author that intrigues me, I quickly look up a title, add it to my Wish List, and buy it at a later date. The conveinence of Amazon just cannot be outdone.

Recently I purchased 1 Dead in Attic, by Chris Rose. At a book store, it would have cost $15. Amazon's price: $10.20. For someone who attempts to read about a book a week, the year-long savings are apparent.

However, I will always extol the average book store experience. A recent bout of fickleness regarding my next literary endeavour reaffirmed this. Meandering fluidly through aisles of books, removing one from its spot, flipping through it, then returning it is, dare I say, a mystical experience for me.

Comparing online and in-store book buying is similar to dating. Yes, web sites such as E-Harmony, Match and Chemistry are popular and, to varying degrees, successful. However, sometimes you need to meet another person face to face to see if the sparks fly.

Monday, February 4, 2008

McDonald's Side Effects?

Yesterday I did something that I had not done in quite a while: I ate at McDonald's. I now regret this. After seeing the famous Supersize Me documentary, I quietly affirmed to my dietary conscience that I would never step into the light of the golden arches. However, the lengthy time spent away from McDonald's made me curious, and I felt compelled to try it again. You know, for old time sake. My foray into the infamous and noxious menu, you ask? A double fish sandwich, medium fries and a medium chocolate shake. I will admit, it tasted pretty damn good. Really good, actually. Yet, my momentary culinary elixir soon faded as I developed a headache, one that has lasted, albeit inconsistently, for two days now.

Can a spontaneous Mickey Dee's splurge after significant time away do this? I now remember why I vowed to stay away from that hideous place, where good and decent Americans go to guiltily increase their waist size and risk for coronary conditions.

A Recommended Reading

Pulitzer Prize winning author Michael Chabon writes a well-written editorial supporting Barack Obama in the Washington Post this morning. It's worth a read.

A taste:

To support Obama, we must permit ourselves to feel hope, to acknowledge the possibility that we can aspire as a nation to be more than merely secure or predominant. We must allow ourselves to believe in Obama, not blindly or unquestioningly as we might believe in some demagogue or figurehead but as we believe in the comfort we take in our families, in the pleasure of good company, in the blessings of peace and liberty, in any thing that requires us to put our trust in the best part of ourselves and others. That kind of belief is a revolutionary act. It holds the power, in time, to overturn and repair all the damage that our fear has driven us to inflict on ourselves and the world.
On a literary side-note, I've read, and was underwhelmed by, Chabon's The Final Solution. I own the Pulitzer-winning The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay and hope to take a crack at sometime soon, if I can finally get through A Confederacy of Dunces.