well, my point was in no way Mac versus PC related, but about undeniable advantages from a pure business oriented viewpoint - and that is time and cost.
Between 1990 and 2000 you actually
could upgrade any Mac system by a simple file copy of the new OS, not even an installer or 'wizzard' bs was needed and all your major software kept running - you actually
could choose if you wanted an upgrade or didn't need it.
Just remember the OS mess that M$ produced in that decade and the follow-up cost after the initial purchase, the requirement for constant tech support.
If you had a Mac user with a broken OS on the phone, you could tell him to reboot the machine from a CD and replace the thing called 'system folder' by a copy from a backup and 15 minutes later all was up and running again - did you ever try that with Windoze 3.1, 95, 98, NT, W2K, XP ?
Now give me one good reasons why these machines didn't sell like hell ?
Believe me, we've discussed this problem with high ranked executives from Apple and with equally high ranked 'key-accounts' who had a pro-Apple attitude...
As experienced and skilled all those participants were - noone had a clue why marketing failed, whatever they did.
TCO isn't just a buzzword if you
can present real world figures
So it's bare nonsense to point to SonicCore's marketing (or 'facts' about the big SFP advantages) and consider them responsible.
Their 'functional' solution is as mass-market compatible as Apple's system was - and the latter definetely was the best
user(!) oriented desktop OS ever.
Not a server OS, not the driver for a 5k machine infrastructure, not for a number crunching cluster - a desktop OS, and that's what 90% of the small business and private users would want.
But they still didn't buy it - marketing on that scale is a different process...
... as Apple brilliantly demonstrated with their latest cash cow - the
i-pod
noone really needs it and everyone wants one (admittedly or not)

now they have their own license to print money and M$ isn't alone anymore, how cute...
you probably don't want SonicCore to go the Apple way, don't you ?
not that I wouldn't wish them an equally rewarding enterprise... that's an offer (probably) noone would deny... but in the sense of our own tech&sound obsession it just wouldn't be nice
imho one should be aware for which part of the market one is working, focussing energy on what's reasonable and possible.
It may require some re-thinking of prices, too - and we as customers and SonicCore as manufacturers should be proud about the products - for example the upcoming Solaris hardware...
a Scope pro with both software packages is rock bottom to a degree that it almost spoils the system's reputation - ok, it's clear that there were certain reasons for the price developement... but the fact remains
cheers, Tom