PCs, Operating Systems, and Greenery 2
I’ve been in the market for a new PC for a bit, and since I don’t have the cash right now I have some time to look at options. I’ve been reading up on some reviews and found that Apple has really been taking this green computing thing seriously. For example, some of the laptop reviews wanted to give an apples to apples type of comparison for things like 3D benchmarks, disk throughput capability, etc. The only solution they had was to install Windows on the Mac laptop with Apple’s BootCamp to switch between the operating systems. This is where it gets a bit interesting. With Windows and Mac OS X on the same hardware, the battery life was very different. See this laptop mag review for details. As much as a four hour difference. Even with Windows installed, it still outperformed the industry average for laptops in it’s class by as much as an hour.
Seeing that review reminded me of my own experience when I switched from Windows to Ubuntu Linux on my little old HP laptop. My battery life was cut in half. There’s a lot that the operating system can do to make the power it uses. You might be able to explain away the difference between Windows and OS-X on the Mac laptop with Windows not having the right driver for the hardware. That may be the case, but to me that doesn’t explain a four hour difference.
For grins, I pitted an AlienWare M15x configuration against a MacBook Pro 15. I made the configurations as close as I possibly could, and it turned out to be a dollar for dollar equivalent ($2475 for both systems as configured). So I bet you’re thinking that I gamed the system a little. Well, AlienWare has updated it’s configurations more recently than Apple so it couldn’t be an exact equivalent. The AlienWare PC had the same size screen, but it was 1080p. It had the same configuration for a hard drive, but the AlienWare had a quad core i7 instead of a Core 2 processor. The RAM was using a 1333Mhz bus speed instead of 1066MHz. The AlienWare PC also has all its cool lighting effects. Technically, it was a better buy …except… the keyboard had some soft spots, and the touch pad was smaller and didn’t support gestures. The final difference was that the AlienWare PC was a heck of a lot heavier, bulkier, and featured a 2:30 battery life.
There’s a lot to be said for the Apple MacBook Pro. I haven’t read a review where the reviewer absolutely hated it. It doesn’t do gaming as well as your PC laptops, but if gaming is not a big part of your life that’s OK. It’s a very respectable package, and it’s an industry leader in reducing its impact on the environment. I’m not a tree hugging green guy, but I can appreciate not needing to take out my power cord for hours at a time. I can appreciate a laptop that only weighs about 5 lbs for a Pro configuration.
So when is PC going to catch up? Windows 7 needs to get even more aggressive with it’s power saving features, and work with the motherboard manufactures and CPU manufacturers to help it become more efficient. PC manufacturers have to start getting what the mobile experience is about. I’m a programmer, I can use the extra cycles in the more powerful machines, but I also tend to put my machines through some abuse. I’d like to not burn a hole in my jeans when I’m running builds and test suites. I’d like to have more pixels on my screen (hint, hint Apple).
What would make my day is if the next generation of MacBook Pros each featured full 1080p video (at least for 15” and 17” models), had quad core versions available, and a minimum of 4GB of RAM. All for the prices that they are sold today. I know I’m greedy, but this laundry list is not outside the realm of impossibility. I’d just like to see it within the next couple of months.
