anecdotal evidence indeed. that's precisely the point. there is no empirical evidence behind the vast majority of comments like these. conclusions without evidence or any indication of the methods used to arrive at them.
linux? are you kidding? this is exactly what i was referring to: assumptions. how did you conclude by booting an os i meant linux?
Actually that's not anecdotal evidence. Anecdotal evidence looks like this:
"It has been my experience that XXX"
The parent has made a different formulation, specifically:
"Every person belonging to group Y has had experience XXX"
This difference is significant, because the argument is basically stating that it is not only the experience of the person making the argument, but that the person making the argument is expecting that the readers of the argument are going to be able to confirm the experience for themselves. This is a much stronger argument than mere anecdote.
And for those that are already starting to lean on their keyboards to type "the plural of anecdote is not data", that platitude is a recognition that data is supposed to repose on a generalisable sample of reality, and if you are just going on anecdote, even multiple anecdotes, you are leaving yourself wide open to claims of cherry-picking. But this claim does not cherry pick, it says that a vast majority of "techy" peoply should be able to confirm the claim from their own experience.
the original comment referred to a market for "people like [me]" being "not large". my response was that i have not seen any evidence to support that sort of claim. but i'm not even sure i know what he meant by "people like [me]". i had to assume i knew. the problem with assumptions is they can be wrong.
and i'm not sure understand the reference to "techy people". i never mentioned such a group. i mentioned "people like the [commenter's] mom". presumably (another assumption), she's not a "techy person", whatever that is. but maybe i'm not a "techy person" either. what is the definition of "techy person" anyway? would the definition differ based on the person defining it? maybe i see no distinction between "techy" and "not techy". maybe i only see differences in how much a given person understands about what computers can do, and how to make computers do those things.
that's precisely the point. there is no empirical evidence behind the vast majority of comments like these.
Are you being purposefully vague? No empirical evidence of what? I'll counter that there is overwhelming evidence, but I'll share specifics once I know what your claim is. :)
no empirical evidence to support the original statement he made: "the market for people like [me] is not very large"
for one, what does "people like me" mean? people who can make use of non-apple hardware? what sort of uses? i don't know what he meant. i could take a guess. but then i would be making an _assumption_. and i might be dead wrong.
and that's what you did in your comment. you made some assumptions. what were they?
i already told you one: you assumed the os a "mom-type" would run would be various linux distros. what if it's not linux?
here's my guess: we're debating whether mdonahue's statement "people like you are not a large market, unfortunately" is true.
however as i pointed out, we haven't agreed on what "people like me" means. we cannot debate this statement until we have agreed on a definition for that. then we have to consider what is meant by a "large market". what is a "large market"? then we have to decide whether this what is assrted in his statement, if true, is "unfortunate" or not. or maybe we can skip that since it seems like just a mdonahue opinion.
is this explanation still too vague for you? i'm not sure how much more specific i can get.
linux? are you kidding? this is exactly what i was referring to: assumptions. how did you conclude by booting an os i meant linux?
a true apple fanboy. thanks for sharing.