Ellie, you're just arguing semantics.??xp
Of course I mean the entire package when I say Mac and PC, and, Ange, when I say PC I, of course, mean a Windows-based computer.??This isn't a legal hearing, and legalese is just annoying anyway.??
The following are the results of a test performed by Popular Mechanics magazine.??They tested a $1200 Apple MacBook Pro against a $750 HP Pavilion DM4 laptop.??Both computers have the same processor (Intel Core i5, 2.3 GHz), graphics (Intel HD 3000) and RAM (4 GB DDR3); the hard drives are both 5400rpm, but the HP's is larger by 180GB (versus 320GB in the Mac).??The Mac is running Mac OS 10.7 Lion and the HP is running Windows 7, Service Pack 1:
Mac?|?PC
Processor Speed Score
6429?|?6524
Graphics Speed Test (fps)
12.64 | 9.7
Gaming (fps)
31.6 | 32.8
Six-App Simultaneous Launch (sec)
10.5 | 11.5
Video Conversion (sec)
196?| 220
YouTube HD CPU Usage
59%?| 5%
File Compression (sec)
19 | 95
Wake From Sleep (sec)
4.48 | 5.12
Processor tests were conducted using Geekbench 2.1.13, which gave each machine a performance score.??Graphics capability was tested using Cinebench 11.5.??The gaming test used Portal 2 run at high-quality settings.??Video conversion results were based on using HandBrake 0.9.5 to convert a 720p H.264 video to mobile size.??Six-App Simultaneous Launch test used MS Office (Excel and Word), Photoshop, Firefox, Chrome and Handbrake.??YouTube HD video was, of course, to see how Flash video affected performance.??For the compression test, they compressed 786MB of files using each OS's built-in archive functions.
As you can see, using this benchmark test, Windows only won three of eight with Mac OSX Lion taking the other five.
I'd say you can't argue with results, but I'm sure someone here will find a way.??
[EDIT]
Oh yeah, in defining which is "better", PM decided they were both equal since Macs are so expensive and most software is Windows exclusive anyway.