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Three months on the Mac stack

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It’s actually four months now – since May 1st – but I’ve been wanting to write this article for a month. Hence the – somewhat misleading – title.

I bought my MacBook on May 1th after viewing a screencast where a guy sets up a blog in 15 minutes using Ruby on Rails. I immediately said to my stepdad: “I’m going to buy a Mac and learn Ruby on Rails!”

And so I did – the day after, I bought a Mac.

I’ve always been a dedicated user of Microsoft‘s products. First C64, then Amiga, then Mac, then PC. I liked the way everything was tested and came from one place, unlike open source. I’ve always been saying stuff like “I like to pay for my software because then I’m be sure about the quality.” – but in reality, everyone who uses Windows and other Microsoft products know that this isn’t always the case.

So I bought the Mac, and the first thing that surprised me, was how much of day-to-day work was done in the Terminal, or command line. When I installed Ruby on Rails, it was via command line; when I installed plugins, it was via command line. Evererything command line. :-)

Over the next few days I began to get a hang of it. I bought a couple of domain names and signed up for a slice at Slicehost – because I had read some job description that said that you should’ve at least tried to use a whole day of setting a slice.

Coming from Windows, Linux is a whole other deal to setup. I used a lot of the Slicehost articles that guides you through the whole process from setup and security to getting your slice to run as a webserver.

In the beginning I was a little nervous about all the command lines, if they would really work and so one. But the more you try it, the more calm you get. It just works! And lucky me there was a lot of helpful articles about Unix and Linux commands out there (just search for the command on Google).

Since starting out on the Mac, I’ve learned a multitude of things:

In short I’ve learned so much about the open source world that just wasn’t that easy on the Microsoft platform.

I still use Microsoft Windows and other products, but now it’s through VMware Fusion on the Mac.

I’m happy about the Mac because OS X is very unobtrusive, fast operating system and what it does, it does very good. But at the same time, I also want a netbook that’s easier to carry, so I may end up running both systems for different purposes (unless I’m just installing Ubuntu on the netbook too ;-)).

Hope you found this post interesting – I wrote it to tell about a beautiful (yak, I know) progress from Windows to Mac and Linux. Thumbs up if this has made you want to try it too. And please tell me in the comments. :-)

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