Let's start out wit
MACINTOSH:
CAIRN
TERRIER:
Just on the basis of price and weight the choice is obvious. Another plus is that the Cairn Terrier comes in one unit. No printer is necessary, or useful. And -- this was a big attraction to me -- there is no user's manual.
Here are some of the other
qualities I found put the Cairn out ahead of the Macintosh:
PORTABILITY:
To give you a better idea of size, Toto in "The Wizard of Oz" was a
Cairn Terrier. So you can see that if the young Judy Garland was able to carry
Toto around in that little picnic basket, you will have no trouble at all moving
your Cairn from place to place. For short trips it will be under its own power.
The Macintosh will not.
RELIABILITY:
In five to ten years, I am sure, the Macintosh will be superseded by a new
model, like the Delicious or the Granny Smith. The Cairn Terrier, on the other
hand has held its share of the market with only minor modifications for hundreds
of years. In the short term, Cairns seldom need servicing, apart from shots and
the odd worming, and most function without interruptions during electrical
storms.
COMPATIBILITY:
Cairn Terriers get along with everyone. And for communications with any other
dog, of any breed, within a radius of three miles, no additional hardware is
necessary. All dogs share a common operating system.
SOFTWARE:
The Cairn will run three standard programs, SIT, COME and NO, and whatever else
you create. It is true that, being microcanine, the Cairn is limited here, but
does load the programs instantaneously. No disk drives. No tapes.
Admittedly, these are peripheral advantages. The real comparison has to be on the basis of capabilities. What can the Macintosh and the Cairn do? Let's start on the Macintosh’s term -- income tax preparations, recipe storage, graphics and astro-physics problems.
|
|
Taxes |
Recipes |
Graphics |
Astrophysics |
|
Macintosh |
yes |
Yes |
yes |
yes |
|
Cairn |
no |
No |
no |
no |
At first glance it looks
bad for the Cairn. But it's important to look beneath the surface with this kind
of chart. If you yourself are leaning towards the Macintosh, ask yourself these
questions: Do you want to do your own income taxes? Do you want to type all your
recipes into a computer? In your graph, what would you put on the x-axis? on the
y-axis? Do you have any astrophysics problems you want solved?
Then consider the Cairn's specialties: playing fetch and tug-of-war, licking your face, and chasing foxes out of rock cairns (eponymously). Not that no software is necessary. All these functions are part of the operating system.
|
|
Fetch |
Tug-of-war |
Face |
Foxes |
|
Cairn |
yes |
yes |
yes |
yes |
|
Macintosh |
no |
no |
no |
no |
Another point to keep in
mind is that computers, even the Macintosh only do what you tell them to do.
Cairns perform their functions all on their own. Here are some of the additional
capabilities that I have discovered once I got the Cairn home and housebroken:
WORD
PROCESSING:
Remarkably, the Cairn seems to understand every word I
say. He has a nice way of pricking up his ears at words like "out" or
"ball." He also has highly tuned voice-recognition.
EDUCATION:
The Cairn provides children with hands-on experience at an early age,
contributing to social interaction, crawling ability, and language skills. At
age one, my daughter could say "Sit" "Come" and
"No".
CLEANING:
This function was a pleasant surprise. But of course cleaning up around the cave
is one of the reasons dogs were developed in the first place. Users with young (below
age two) children will still find the function useful. The Cairn Terrier cleans
the floor, spoons, bib, and baby, and has an unerring ability to distinguish
strained peas from ears, nose, and fingers.
PSYCHOTHERAPY:
Here the Cairn really shines. And remember, therapy is something that computers
have tried. There is a program that makes the computer ask you questions when
you tell it your problem. You say, "I'm afraid of foxes." The computer
says, "You're afraid of foxes?"
The Cairn won't give you
that kind of echo. Like Freudian analysts, Cairns are mercifully silent: unlike
Freudians, they are infinitely sympathetic. I've found that the Cairn will share,
in a non-judgemental fashion, disappointments, joys, and frustrations. And you
don't have to know BASIC.
This last capability is
related to the Cairn's strongest point, which was the final deciding factor in
my decision against the Macintosh--user-friendliness. On this criterion, there
is simply no comparison. The Cairn Terrier is the essence of user-friendliness.
It has fur, it doesn't flicker when you look at it, and it wags its tail.