It's simply an option that presents a lot of flexibility for a little compromise in manageable downtime.
For a daily machine, it makes no sense to constantly reboot via Boot Camp but no one does that with full intent. Log into any browser and voila, all the mail is there.
#GOOD CAD FOR MAC INSTALL#
A technical person able to install Windows via Boot Camp will figure it out after all these years. will sync fine or just grab a bunch of hard drives and configure them accordingly. The pedestrian services like Dropbox, Drive, Backblaze, S3, Azure, etc. Backup plans are incredibly cheap and cross-platform in 2015. With the speed of reboots and cloud syncing that is indifferent to the operating system, it takes seconds to switch from one machine to another. So simple most casual home users can even do it and endure the oh so humiliating pain of a restart over faster than most can complain. The two points listed shows just how inexperienced and out of touch you are with technology. The reality is that at this point, nearly every piece of software is either available or interchangeable on either platform, or can be run on a Mac via Boot Camp et al.Īs to your second question - should you learn it on a PC, well, that's entirely up to you. In my opinion, there are no significant differences between the Mac and Windows versions of AutoCAD specifically, and as long as you're comfortable in a Windows environment (i.e., Ctrl vs. ⌘) you're going to be okay.Īdditionally, I don't think there's much point in you buying a second device to run a piece of software that works perfectly well on the one you have.Īnecdotally, a small boutique firm with a Bring Your Own Device policy may let you continue down your Mac-based path.
(For example, Vectorworks was, for a long time, only available on Macs.) That does not mean that there are not offices that operate in Mac environments, it's just that a majority are using PCs.
Regarding the first part of your question, the answer is yes, most offices operate in PC environments.