Talking about hardware:
If you've never used a retina macbook, you have no idea what that guy means by calling the new display "jaw-dropping".
The thing about Apple hardware is that IT IS engineered very well. Everything works very well together and the OS synced with that hardware.
It's the quality of the design and the quality of the components and how well everything works together that's work the price, with OS X at its heart. You couldn't ask for a better platform, but I do wish there were alternative platforms like that.
Getting a cheap 4K display for editing and few other screens for tools may sound ok, but in reality and in terms usability, who (using the tools professionally) would want one applications, video editor specifically, to be split between multiple monitors? It makes much more sense to have 4K content and all the button, timeline etc. on the same screen.
Multiple screen setup is great if you're using multiple apps, but last thing you want is to split one window of one app between multiple screens. You'd realise this, If you had to work with that app 40 hrs a week.
Personally, I use OS X for all personal computing and Windows PC for gaming + Linux OS for pro work.
If you've never used a retina macbook, you have no idea what that guy means by calling the new display "jaw-dropping".
The thing about Apple hardware is that IT IS engineered very well. Everything works very well together and the OS synced with that hardware.
It's the quality of the design and the quality of the components and how well everything works together that's work the price, with OS X at its heart. You couldn't ask for a better platform, but I do wish there were alternative platforms like that.
Getting a cheap 4K display for editing and few other screens for tools may sound ok, but in reality and in terms usability, who (using the tools professionally) would want one applications, video editor specifically, to be split between multiple monitors? It makes much more sense to have 4K content and all the button, timeline etc. on the same screen.
Multiple screen setup is great if you're using multiple apps, but last thing you want is to split one window of one app between multiple screens. You'd realise this, If you had to work with that app 40 hrs a week.
Personally, I use OS X for all personal computing and Windows PC for gaming + Linux OS for pro work.