Not wanting to start a Mac/PC flame war here but I just can't let this go by .....
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I always wanted to try a Mac, but I still can't justify the premium price for what you get. )</font>
Research it - and you might find out that if you equip a Dell comparably as whatever mac you are looking at, the Dell would be more expensive ... yes, I'm sure that's how it is.
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I can't believe they still don't have the ability to upgrade their machines much at all. )</font>
Ummm - not sure where you are getting this data but it's not really very accurate - in fact it's highly inaccurate. Who told you this ? They were wrong. And what exactly is it that you would be wanting to upgrade ? Maybe the upgradability is a bit of a red herring - Apple was shipping built-in gigabit ethernet on the logic board, Firewire, and 802.11 way before it was mainstream in the PC world. Maybe more features from the factory means less need to upgrade ..... dunno ....
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( I suppose they still want you to throw them away rather than upgrade your aging Apple. )</font>
Most folks just keep on using them (since they are far more secure than a PC - viruses are almost non-exsistant on the Mac), resell them, or give them to a friend /family member - generally the useful life of a Mac is at least twice as long as a PC. For what it's worth I've never thrown any of my Macs away - I've sold several, traded a few others - and always been able to repair any of them.
Right now I have a Powermac 8100/100 (1995, upgraded to a G3) PowerMac 7500 (1995, upgraded to a G4 processor, 10/100 Ethernet & ATA hard drive), PowerMac 7600 (1996, upgraded to a G4 processor, 10/100 Ethernet & ATA hard drive), PowerMac 9600/350 (1997, 10/100 Ethernet), PowerBook G3 (2000, the wifes, slated for a G4 processor upgrade - six yearold computer and she uses it every day), PowerMac Dual G4/450 (2000, mostly stock at this point), and my current unit - a PowerMac Dual G4/800 (2001) - with an internal 375 gigabyte RAID 0 array, Dual Ethernet (10/100 card and builtin Gigabit), builtin 802.11b base station, running a pair of Sony G520 20" monitors @ 1600 x 1200 in millions of colors in a continous desktop ... off the stock video card that came with the machine ..... I have another 300 or 400 gigs of external removable Firewire hard drive storage.
Every one of the above machines is every bit as capable and functional as it was the day I bought it - and they were pretty capable at that point. All of them were used (professionally) to edit video and/or to produce 2D/3D computer generated animation - something that is far more computationally intensive than surfing the net or running Quicken or Word. I've even installed and ran Mac OS X on the older machines (7500/7600/9600 - all circa 1995 -1997) and it was quite usable, if a tad slow - try installing XP on a an a 9 or 10 year PC and lemme know how well that flys .... upgrade, shmupgade .....
My laser printer is a 1992 Apple Laserwriter Pro 600 - and is used every day - and it's still running just fine thank you very much - the only thing I've ever done to it is replace the toner carts, blow out the dust, and throw a 32 meg memory upgrade in it (last year .... just cause I had it laying around /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif)
In the interests of full disclosure, I do have a dual PIII 900 box running 98 SE and Win2K - for those times (very few, very far between, thankfully) when I absolutely can't avoid going to over to the darkside to get something done. /forums/images/graemlins/cool.gif
And besides, if ya just gotta have that "Intel Inside" sticker on the box, starting in 2006, that box can have an Apple label on it as well. /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif