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Five reasons to ditch the Mac and return to PCs

Five reasons to ditch the Mac and return to PCs

Productivity gains, compatibility issues drive a CTO (and Mac fan) to switch to Windows at his company

Timothy Keanini, chief technology officer of nCircle, loves Macs-just not in his company (a maker of network security and compliance management tools).

Keanini has been both a Mac user and a Mac developer during the past five years. Starting in 2001, he brought Macs into his 100-person company (starting with an Apple G4 notebook for himself) because he believed the user-friendly interface and ability to work in a Unix-like environment would help productivity among the engineering team.

So Keanini, who handled IT decisions until the company grew large enough to bring in a director of IT in 2005, encouraged and officially supported nCircle's approximately 40 engineers using MacBooks.

"The rest of our company was Windows, but engineering was mainly Macs because of me," he says.

But ultimately, instead of productivity gains, dealing with compatibility issues between the Macs used by the engineers and the PCs running Windows used by the line-of-business people in the office slowed down work and resulted in communications issues, he says.

So while Apple's sales continue to grow, Keanini decided to buck the trend, and gave up on his most recent Apple machine, an Intel dual-core based MacBook Pro.

"Between four and six months ago I switched back to Windows," he says. While Apple's installed base is growing, he left the camp he had once espoused to others. He also now advocates that his company's engineers get Windows machines. Even at his home, Apple's role has changed.

"I am all PC at home and at work now, because frankly if I'm not working, I'm gaming. And the Mac doesn't have games," Keanini says, though his household still has three Apple machines in use by other family members.

What makes an Apple loyalist change camps? Here's a look at five reasons why one tech chief did just that.

1. Productivity Trumps Religion

It's easy to fall in love with the aluminum cases used in Mac hardware and the slick interface design of the Mac OS X, Keanini says. Those are two reasons why more people are moving to Apple products: Apple announced shipments of its personal computers grew by 44 per cent in the first quarter of 2008, beating the 15 per cent growth in PC shipments worldwide, according to market researcher IDC.

Yet, depending on how a company uses Macs, trying to integrate the computers into a company's workflow can kill productivity, Keanini says. The applications never quite match up, data has to be massaged to be useful, and the company has to design workarounds for each issue, he says.

"My rule is to find the technology that makes your company most productive and be honest with yourself about it," he says. "Don't bring religion into it."

2. Workarounds Waste Time

As soon as a company allows a different operating system onto workers' desks, employees have to start dealing with all the little problems that crop up. Calendar programs no longer synch with the rest of the company and documents created in one office software suite have to be converted to another, usually Microsoft Office. If your company uses Microsoft Exchange, as Keanini's does, this adds another layer of problems.

"Everything is going to be a little bit different, and that little difference in everything eventually adds up," Keanini says.

One company engineer woke up Keanini the night before presentation slides were due for a conference, his voice cracking with stress, because his slides-exported from Apple's Keynote presentation application to Microsoft PowerPoint-looked nothing like they had on the Mac.

While such mistakes can be avoided, the work required to keep the company's data working on two platforms eventually saps productivity gains, he says.

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