Obviously, it had to be installed from floppy disk, and it ran on all my Windows machines until I switched to Mac. Take this example – the Best of Windows Entertainment Package (BOWEP) was one of my favourite pieces of software when my first Windows 3.1 computer came into our household. Microsoft is also good at backwards compatibility. With such a potentially huge audience of Windows users, why would you bother to consider Mac? Windows is much much more popular than Mac and has roughly 80% market share (depends who who you listen to) compared to around 15% for the Mac. If they followed the crowd, they would be developing for Windows. They aren’t treated well by their mother (Apple), but they don’t follow the crowd. Some say they have an easy life, because developing for the Mac is much easier than for other platforms. Which brings me nicely onto the topic of this week – Mac developers. My favourite response is, “so glad I was a product of the 90s”. I asked some of my friends to look at these videos, to see if I wasn’t the only person who thought they were odd. If everyone followed the advice in these videos, everybody would be following the crowd, thus creating more questions than answers. Peer Pressure (apart from showing you that stealing rubbish is wrong) is about influence, and Treat Your Mother Right is about respect. īoth of them are relevant to the topic of this column (you may understand the pure genius of myself by the end). The best known videos are Treat Your Mother Right and Peer Pressure. T produced a series of self-help videos in 1984 that were intended to help young kids as well as show his softer side. ![]() ![]() T is famous for his bad man attitude, as seen in Rocky III and The A-Team (which are among my favorite movies and TV shows respectively).
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