* How I Use My Dell
Posted on November 14th, 2008 by Dave Johnson. Filed under Uncategorized.
I recently got a Dell Latitude E6400 so figured that I would try to get on Hacker News like Tim did about his Mac workflow. Something tells me this might be a difficult thing
I have made the switch back to PC from Mac. I switched to Mac in the first place since I had my old IBM T41 stolen and at the time the MacBook actually seemed like good value. Some of the main reasons for switching back include the fact that I needed a new laptop and didn’t want to have to buy *another* special connector from Apple to connect to an external monitor, nor could my Mac handle Eclipse even at 2.4GHz with 2GB of RAM (well OS X couldn’t but VMWare could … sort of. Maybe I was doing something wrong!). Oh and did I mention that my new Dell is 25% cheaper than the equivalent MacBook Pro and that includes a Dell 3 year onsite next business day support package? Next business day! I never want to have to talk to an Apple Genius ever again just to have them tell me that they have to send off my computer to get anything fixed.

Ok, in with how (and why) I use my Dell.
Operating System
While it comes at a premium, increase of $50 or something, I had no choice but to go with the “downgrade” to Windows XP Business. I really appreciate that Dell gives users that option cause if I had to get Vista I would have probably gotten a Mac instead. XP is totally fine and I see far fewer slow downs or crashes than I did on the MacBook - YMMV. All the Dell Control stuff is pretty annoying for changing mouse, wireless and most other settings, I much prefer the native Windows or OS X feeling of those.
Hardware
I use the great “nipple” mouse pointer that is a nice reminder of my old ThinkPad and turn the touch pad off completely. The E6400 has a light monitor and adjusts the LED screen and keyboard backlight appropriately - it’s nice that they are on par with Macs on that feature. It has a SmartCard reader, VGA and HDMI (or at least some sort of digital video thingy) along with all the standard USB etc ports and DVD.
Disks and Backup
Holy shit do I ever love Windows Exploring! I don’t think that I have ever seen a more annoying piece of software than Finder. What is amazing is that most Apple users even agree with me that it is completely terrible. Good thing that they added stacks in the dock in Leopard and left Finder as is …
Everything for me is in the cloud (Flickr, YouTube, Delicious, Wordpress, Google) so I don’t really backup much. However, just for save keeping I do put a few things on an external hard drive and my music is all on my iPod - though most of my music I couldn’t care less if it all got lost.
Taskbar
I don’t really use the taskbar too much. Alt+tab and Windows+e/r/m get do pretty much everything you need. Of course for everything else there is Launchy (Alt+space) that is just like QuickSilver or Spotlight and it is open source to boot (as if I am really going to go in there and try to change it or something!). I tried Dash Command but it didn’t even find Firefox. The one thing that I used to use a lot was the address bar, however, Microsoft had to get rid of it in SP 3 for some reason *facepalm*.
I use the quick launch tray a little bit - mostly just for my different browsers that I need for testing. and of course the tasktray is filled a whole pile of shit. With the address bar gone I am thinking that I might just try hidding the taskbar all together.
Screen
I use an external monitor most of the time aside from when I work at home and lounge around on the couch. The screen is a bit more compact than a MacBook Pro at 14″ but with the same lovely 1440*900 resolution. I was really fealing squished on that MacBook 1280 resolution. I never used spaces on the Mac so no love lost there, however, expose did come in handy once in a while and I am searching for a good alternative on Windows - most I have found only respond to key presses (F9-11) but maybe that will be ok.
Terminal
I use terminal a lot for building, ssh, mysql etc and Command Prompt works just fine for me (Update: as long as it is augmented with Cygwin). I increase the default settings of course so that I can actually see it and definitely increase the buffer size to something reasonable. Thinking of tricking out the colors from just basic black and white but haven’t yet. I did like the semi transparent Terminal.app but that is just superfluous really.
Google. Google mail is great. I can’t imagine using something like Outlook or *shudder* Thunderbird.
Calendar
Ditto.
Browsers
I use Firefox 3 for most of my browser since I love the address bar search feature - it is amazing - as well as the saving / restoring of open tabs. I usually have a lot of tabs open and once in a while Firebug will cause Firefox to crash so being able to load up those old tabs is a god send. Oh yah I use Firebug, all the time. Love it. I need to use IE6-8 for testing as well as Firefox 2, Safari 3 and Opera 9. I might consider trying Safari 3.2 as my default browser but will see.
Coding
I use Eclipse Europa for most of my coding needs. I never really got into TextMate on the Mac but tried some alternatives on Windows like E-Editor and Intype but neither of them even had a “search in project” feature so both were quickly trashed. E-Editor didn’t even support my mouse wheel for scrolling. In addition to Eclipse I have a few important plugins like Flex Builder (which of course now includes JSEclipse for some inane reason) and I use Aptana for HTML and CSS editing as well as Rad Rails for RoR and their Adobe AIR plugin. Eclipse also has Git and Subversion plugins which really rounds out the needs for writing code. I occasionally use Visual Studio - which is a great IDE - and use MySQL for most of my database needs.
Other Clients
I am finally getting back onto IRC with mIRC, while I use Twhirl for Twitter and GTalk for chat. I am very happy to no longer be using Adium. I have Office installed but use Google Docs just as much probably since most things need to be written collaboratively. I might try OpenOffice 3. Of course I use iTunes for music and, come to think of it, maybe my Dell will actually be able to play to my AirTunes which my MacBook has not been able to do for the past several months. I also use Tortoise and Subversion of course and these days Git too with msysgit which is not all that bad.
Security
What’s that? I leave my Windows firewall off cause it’s annoying. I haven’t had security problems in a long time unless you consider having your laptop stolen from your office a security problem - I can only assume it went to a good cause (Vancouver DTES).
One last thing, did you know that when you click on the maximize button in Windows XP the window will actually fill the entire screen. True story.
This is just my exerpience over the last year. YMMV. Let the flaming begin!
14 Responses to “How I Use My Dell”
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November 14th, 2008 at 5:24 pm
Say it ain’t so!!! Hahaha. I need to use both, but my choice would be a Mac if I wasn’t reliant on Visual Studio during the day. That said, you’ve hit on a few key things that are niggly about OS X - maximize! However, I could never last with XP’s 2GB of ram max. It is a killer. The one bonus is Chrome for your G Apps. I surf in Chrome and develop in FF.
November 14th, 2008 at 5:35 pm
Things are subjective, news at 11.
Good luck not using the taskbar, like when you want a quick way to eject an external drive.
Also,if “everyting is in the cloud” you don’t need an operating system, you need a web browser, so it porbably wasn’t the best idea in the world to pay for an OEM Vista licence and then an additonal $50 for Windows XP.
And a quick note: Quicksilver is open source also, so you can not go in and change that either.
November 14th, 2008 at 5:36 pm
Alsom fuck typos, it is late and I am drunk.
November 14th, 2008 at 7:22 pm
For an article titled “How I Use My Dell”, you sure do spend a lot of time talking about Macs.
Regardless, it’s clear that you’ve created some nice delusions for yourself to justify not using the Mac, which is clearly superior on every single point you made except for price. Good job..I guess?
November 14th, 2008 at 8:04 pm
Yeah, total maximizing of windows, powerful explorer (that doesn’t force the methods Apple thinks I should use).
I’m glad that the f*cking brushed metal is gone, but just switched back as well. Vista is actually great! I switched back to XP after half a year… for about 2 hours. Then back to Vista.
And don’t get me started on tabbed explorer windows:
http://qttabbar.wikidot.com/
November 14th, 2008 at 8:43 pm
“Good luck not using the taskbar, like when you want a quick way to eject an external drive.”
Find drive in explorer, right-click, press eject. No taskbar needed. But I love the taskbar and start menu; it’s a much better interface than the dock. Of course, I hear that Windows 7 will turn the taskbar into something new and probably worse.
November 15th, 2008 at 12:17 am
Or God forbid you press the eject button on the side of the laptop… Which is faster than all software solutions.
Nice honest review. Although your coding tools make me a little sad — Eclipse and Rad Rails.. ugh. Notepad++ and E-Editor all the way for me. I suppose it depends on what you are coding. I do python and ROR, and rad rails makes me a very sad panda.
Everything else I’m in agreement with. Macs are great for non-technical people, since they dont care about choice. But if you want choice, windows is still the place to be.
November 15th, 2008 at 5:49 am
The funny part is, the “How I use my Mac” article talked about how the guy used his Mac. This is just a flame bait on why you switched back to a PC. I use both, and was hoping to find some useful apps for the PC that I don’t use. All I got was you trying to sound superior.
November 15th, 2008 at 8:18 am
““Good luck not using the taskbar, like when you want a quick way to eject an external drive.”
Find drive in explorer, right-click, press eject. No taskbar needed. But I love the taskbar and start menu; it’s a much better interface than the dock. Of course, I hear that Windows 7 will turn the taskbar into something new and probably worse.”
“quick”
November 15th, 2008 at 2:58 pm
“Or God forbid you press the eject button on the side of the laptop… Which is faster than all software solutions.”
Your laptop has an eject button for USB hard drives?
“Macs are great for non-technical people, since they dont care about choice. But if you want choice, windows is still the place to be.”
Oh yeah, those Macintoshes, everyone knows luddites incapable of navigating Windows’ intricacies use UNIX and we all know that Windows is the real platform of freedom and choice. Cancel or Allow?
November 16th, 2008 at 6:30 am
you know, the Mac does actually not have a maximize button.
The green one is called a zoom button which switches the windows size an position between a default and a user defined state.
Thanks for the entertainment, anyway.
November 16th, 2008 at 9:57 am
Hi,
How I use my Dell? Over the past three months I would have loved to have used it as a frisbee or a hammer.
I am thinking of switching to a Mac after a having a HORRIBLE experience with a Dell Laptop. I am a realtor in Downtown Vancouver and I bought a new Dell laptop to replace an older Gateway laptop that was getting a bit overwhelmed and unreliable. The new Dell ended up being SLOWER than the old Gateway!!!! I will spare you all the gory details, but I lost literally 4-5 workdays because of this garbage latop.
Should I switch to Mac? I really don’t want to take the time to learn a new OS and I have heard that for business PC’s are better
Does anyone have any suggestions for a reliable and fast PC Laptop for my next purchase?
December 2nd, 2008 at 1:41 pm
Dave, what Windows software do you use for FTP? That is, if you even need to connect via http://FTP.
December 2nd, 2008 at 4:14 pm
@mike everyone has a story about a crap computer from some manufacturer I guess!
@geof in the past I have used SmartFTP and CuteFTP. both free (from what I recall) and pretty good.