
I have not used the latest Windows version, however, so they're probably more similar now than when I was using both.Windows has been imitating and "catching up" with Mac's GUI system since Xerox invented the GUI.

In my work I have used both systems and (like most "average", everyday users who've tried both, I suspect) I prefer a Mac. Programs written for Windows, which was designed as a graphical user interface (GUI) system on top of DOS rather than an actual operating system, tended to have corrections and kluges heaped upon kluges in order to achieve similar-looking results, which is why Windows-based systems tended to hang every time you turned around.I'm not a computer geek, but I am a codger who's watched this competition since its beginnings. Right on, KK.But no one has mentioned one Mac advantage: the wonderful consistency among programs written for Mac operating systems, maintained since Day 1.
