"If you purchased a laptop today, you are more likely to have purchased a Mac over any other type of computer. If you’re someone who makes over $250,000 per year, and you purchased a laptop, you almost certainly purchased a Macbook Pro."
Wikipedia seems to indicate that a reasonable estimate of OSX market share would be around 10%, with 20% on the high end (Steve Jobs claimed 20% in 10/2010). http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usage_share_of_operating_system...
If that statement is not true, doesn't that significantly undercut the author's argument?
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1cUjZ_7rlAmKRDVB6GXId73h_...
If you put all of the millions of laptops sold in the U.S. into a big bag, and you drew one out at random and inspected the laptop to determine its brand, the greatest odds are that the brand would be Apple. I believe that was the claim.
The best bet for these types of companies is to switch their products to a SaaS and then just build thin native UIs for mobile.
For example, certain versions required that you run as admin (bad security policy), and would update themselves in the background silently. The update would break compatibility with networked files, and was huge. So someone would take the update, the data file then wouldn't work on everyone else's computer until they updated, which would swamp the network and generally cause havoc.
As an alternative, if you're a geek I highly recommend the programs found a http://ledger-cli.org/
No, please, bore us with a long description. I migrated my family business's 5 company accounts from Quickbooks Desktop (Win) to Quickbooks Online this past March. I use it every day, as does my mom (who is not very computer savvy). We're both in agreement that it is much better than Desktop, at least for what we do (entering sales receipts, bank reconciliations, running reports). For us, one key benefit of using Quickbooks Online is the ability to switch between companies very quickly.