Hi,

There have been a lot of unsupported and non objective replies to your query.

All Macs you can buy today are solid performers. We have reached the point in 
CPU performance that there's little difference between bottom of the line and 
top of the line machines for us who can't see, what's the difference between 
500 frames per second in some game vs. 450 frames per second when your eye 
can't tell the difference. I promise you the average blind user's Mac barely 
breaks 30% cpu day to day. This part of the reason why the PC market is 
declining--people don't need to upgrade as often as they had in the past.

There is absolutely no reason to buy the Macbook Pro if you are blind. The cost 
is mainly in the retina screen. 

The single most important factor is internal memory. That will be the most 
significant real world speed boost for you and will help you in both bootcamp 
and or a virtual PC situation.

Don't bother paying for the processor upgrade. Do max out your RAM though. The 
internal hard drive SSD is the other place to put your money. The sweet spot in 
price seems to be 256G.

Some people will argue that using VM to run Windows needs every ounce of 
processor speed. I'll again argue the real world throughput for a blind user 
will be negligible. I suggest you test it out for yourself at an apple store.


I've been using Macs since the beginning. They last. I still use a PowerMac G 5 
that's 10 years old. Part of it works better than my MacBook Air 2012 running 
the latest version of Mavericks. 

For a blind person, the 11 inch  MacBook Air is a steal.  Max out the RAM on 
the entry level version and pick a HD size that fits your needs. 

Doubt my suggestions? Go to an apple store and see if you notice any difference 
between the two models. You won't. 

Take the lightness, portability and power of the current 11 inch Air, and put 
the extra dollars towards apps. And if you don't want a laptop, save even more 
and get the MacMini.


Best,
--k

Faith doesn't give you the answers, it merely stops you from asking the 
questions.


On May 2, 2014, at 7:13 PM, Tristan <theblinddj...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hello,
> 
> I've been a part of this group for some time now, and have enjoyed the
> wealth of information that I've gleaned from observing. I've finally
> come to the decision on switching from Windows to Mac. I'll either be
> getting a MacBook Air, or MacBook Pro.
> 
> One of the big things for me, however, is virtual machines (or
> bootcamp). I still want to be able to virtualize a copy of Windows in
> case I have programs that will only work on the Windows side. Right
> now, the main things I do on Windows are word processing, internet
> browsing, Skype which would be possible on the Mac side, music and the
> occasional game (mostly MUDs using a low memory client). I would like
> to get a steady balance between battery power and processing power
> without having to deal with busyness and lag.
> I have my eye on the MacBook Air 13 inch (with both processor options)
> or the MacBook Pro.
> MacBook Air configuration - 13 inch (256GB SSD HD):
> 1.7GHz Dual-Core Intel Core i7, Turbo Boost up to 3.3GHz
> 8GB 1600MHz LPDDR3 memory
> 
> Or the MacBook pro (without Retina, 13 inch):
> 2.9GHz Dual-core Intel Core i7, Turbo Boost up to 3.6GHz
> 8GB 1600MHz DDR3 SDRAM -- 2x4GB
> 
> I'm really stuck at this point -- what will work the bes? It's also
> sort of nerve-racking putting a large amount of money into something
> that's already two years old. In all, I'm looking for something that
> will last, has updated hardware, and can handle an OS running
> alongside the Mac environment without any hiccups. I'm on a budget of
> about 1,550 dollars.
> I warmly welcome any advice. And yes, I know this list is mainly for
> voiceover users -- but I thought, as a visually impaired user myself,
> that it would be appropriate to ask here.
> 
> Thanks in advance.
> -Tristan
> 
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