l008com wrote:
I don't think that market share chart tells the whole story. While I'm sure there are more windows systems out in the world than Mac, many of those windows systems are old, el-cheapo systems in offices that would not be running anything like this. If there were some way to measure OS marketshare for computers that are real potential folders, I don't think the gap would be quite that large. But there isn't so I'll just keep on speculating I guess.
That's a really good point, but I was a bit shocked that chart was showing near 20% (or 1 out of 5). Then, if you factor in the aspects you're talking about above, that would have to bump it up considerably. I'm an old-school Mac guy, so I remember arguing with people back when the claim was that it was under 10%. But, yes, a lot of Windows machines are point of sales, generic office machines, or generic systems for all sorts of things.
l008com wrote:This was another thought I had, actually. For a trillion dollar company, it wouldn't take many resources to provide a small team that could help F@H, Rosetta, and maybe just distributed computing projects in general, write Metal Computer or whatever it's called, native GPU cores for projects. It would help Apple show off Metal, it would give them plenty of goodwill. They would not only be helping the cause, but facilitating their large user-base to themselves, help the cause in a big way. Someone just needs to get this idea into "Tim Apple's" ear.
Hmm, that's a really interesting idea. Apple could get a lot of good exposure out of something like that. But, it would probably take a while to get going and the momentum behind this might start to decline before it could get going.
I was thinking the other day... I sure hope that once Covid-19 is past us, so many of the people who jumped onboard will want to stay onboard.