I don’t know what typical is, and, I’m not fighting, “I’m just sayin’” (Snoop). I am replying to this thread only in the context of having reliable hardware to pull off performances that (may, in all our dreams) be connected to big 6-7 digit outlays of promoter cash.
All I can say is that I used to build all my PC’s and felt exactly the way you do, and, I don’t anymore.
My clients depend on me, my associates and subcontractors. And let me tell you from the one lawsuit I have been in (as a sub) from front-to-finish that home-made machines with unsupported OS’s won’t fly. The other two didn’t last past the first appearance. This is part of being a service provider–getting sued (one piece of advice: never, ever, just “do nothing”).
The word is “reasonable”…as in “would a reasonable person expect it to be reliable”…that’s what will come up.
I used to build my motorcycles too, etc. etc. etc. I have a friend who won’t buy anything (even an ipod) unless he can hack it and put in his own version of an OS, and is never happy with it and when it “works” it crashes and locks up.
This guy bought a ford Flex, a pretty neat car. Because he insists on messing things up, he hacked his previously really neat Microsoft SYNC display, and now when he drives around, it shows “Corrupt Boot Image: 0x401 0x001”…since he messed it up, its also at full brightness.
That’s just a little bit boring for me.
Re: “Sourcing parts locally” let me (finally) put it like this: I was a mac developer in the old, old days and those don’t count. This time around, in the last 4 years, I’ve personally had 3 macs, always two-at-a-time, and in our business (counting quickly) we’ve had 11 more. Out of all those, we had these failures: 2 HD’s, 2 PS’s (laptop), one battery, one fan (Xserve). I personally lost my HD on my PB17 (first new mac) and that was a big bummer. Recovered a lot of files, but, not all, after paying 1000$ to a disk recovery house. Time Machine/Carbon Copy/dd/tar would have taken care of that and its 100% my fault for not having a backup strategy.
Barring my disk-loss (the other one was covered by Time Machine), we have had no other loss of data, or significant downtime. Part of that is standardized parts…we have some laptops that use the 65W PS, but, we stock two spare 85W PS’s and those work. We have 85W PS’s sprinkled around the office at various couches and in the meeting room too. All machines covered by TM, and with Carbon Copy as well.
That’s it…not shockingly better than an average PC fleet, …just a lot easier.
I used to be a big windows shop, and I had a coven of guys that wouldn’t let me run an iphone on my own network, wouldn’t even try mySQL, wouldn’t really get into linux enough to evaluate it for (JUST!) a SMB server etc. I too thought i was saving money…I really did.
But, when I wanted things done, when they folded their arms, made pouty faces, and explained why it was impossible/not smart/too expensive to do basically anything, I started getting sick of it, started keeping track of their responses, thumbs-up/down, and, in the long-run, it was 90%+ thumbs-down. I recognized this from the mainframe era, the techno-priesthood of the Big Iron…so,…
…I laid them all off.
…I sold all our MS servers to our ISP.
…I replaced 40% of the desktops with macs (so far). I bet we’ll go to about 50% in the long-run.
…and now I have one person, staffed as “the IT person”. I just looked up in our hours billing system and she has billed me 19% of her time in the last six pay periods under the “Internal IT” job code. 19% is totally workable instead of 100% (and overtime) for the Three Stooges and their excuses.
re: Updates, yeah, 3 years at Sun, and lots of time with Suns afterwards made me very wary of updates…for a while. Lately, we take the updates in the later parts of the OS cycle on a couple machines, wait a while, and then just apply them. Did I upgrade to SL yet? We have one mini, and one laptop and yeah, there’s problems with both. We use both parallels and vmware for “our legacy software” (apps on Windows not yet replaced) and those are both no-go on SL right now.
When my time was my own, and money was hard, I did it all myself. Now that my time is something I whore out, I delegate. I am delegating the “making personal computers” task out to Apple and others. I feel pretty good recycling the MS-Monks out to the world of crashing zone controllers, registry corruption, MS-SQL lockups and all that. Fooey.
Ultimately you’re talking about saving money . You say “FRACTION” but not really. Its just a matter of a couple thousand dollars across two dozen macs. Basically you’re asking me to trade small, quiet, attractively-designed macs supported by a company that is publicly traded for a “rag-tag fugitive fleet” of different PC parts from different eras, supported by hack crews out there, in the Internet.
Besides being UNLAWFUL, I’d rather support a company that gives a damn about how things work.
“Hokey religions and ancient [pc hardware] are no match for a good [mac] at your side, kid.”
End of line.
G.