“Pray.”
– Wired Magazine cover, June 1997
That was it. One word. Apple’s rainbow logo wrapped in barbed wire.
The article inside was titled “101 Ways to Save Apple.” Michael Dell told reporters he’d “shut it down and give the money back to the shareholders.” Steve Jobs would later say Apple was 90 days from bankruptcy.
I was writing code on a Macintosh Performa 6200 at the time. Everyone told me I was an idiot. “Apple’s dead.” “Switch to Windows before it’s too late.” “You’ll never find work as a Mac developer.”
Twenty-nine years later, Apple is the most valuable company in the world. And I’m still building software on a Mac.
Why I Never Left
It wasn’t loyalty. It wasn’t stubbornness. It was simple: the Mac let me do better work.
As a developer, I need a machine that gets out of my way. No driver conflicts. No registry corruption. No mystery processes eating my CPU. Just me and my code.
When I built TimeNet Law, I made a deliberate choice: Mac only. Not because I’m lazy. Because after 30+ years of watching attorneys struggle with Windows machines, I knew the truth:
The attorneys who use Macs have fewer problems. Period.
Why Lawyers Should Want a Mac
I’ve spent decades building software for attorneys. Here’s what I’ve learned:
1. Security Isn’t Optional Anymore
Law firms are targets. Client data, case strategies, privileged communications: hackers want all of it. macOS was built on Unix, with security baked into the architecture. It’s not bolted on as an afterthought.
2. It Just Works (Still)
That old Apple slogan? Still true. I don’t spend my days troubleshooting TimeNet Law crashes caused by Windows updates. My users don’t call me because their antivirus flagged legal billing software as malware. The Mac ecosystem is predictable, stable, and professional.
3. Privacy by Design
Apple’s business model is selling hardware, not your data. They’ve built privacy into everything, from on-device processing to app sandboxing. For attorneys handling confidential client information, that matters.
4. Longevity
My users run TimeNet Law on Macs that are 8, 10, even 12 years old. Try that with a Windows laptop. Apple silicon has only made this better. M1 machines from 2020 still feel fast in 2026.
5. The Ecosystem
iPhone, iPad, Mac: they talk to each other seamlessly. Copy on your phone, paste on your Mac. Answer calls from your desktop. AirDrop files in seconds. For attorneys who are always moving, this isn’t convenience. It’s competitive advantage.
“But Macs Are Expensive”
Are they?
Calculate the cost of a Windows laptop over 5 years: the machine itself, the antivirus subscription, the IT support calls, the productivity lost to updates and crashes, the replacement when it dies at year 3.
Now calculate a Mac over 5 years. Or 7. Or 10.
The Mac isn’t expensive. It’s economical, if you think beyond the sticker price.
The Bet I Made in 1997
When everyone said Apple was finished, I kept coding on my Performa. When everyone said “real business software” had to run on Windows, I built TimeNet Law for Mac.
That bet paid off. Not because I got lucky, because I understood something the critics didn’t:
The best tools attract the best users.
Attorneys who choose Macs aren’t making a fashion statement. They’re making a business decision. They want reliability over troubleshooting. Security over crossed fingers. Tools that help them practice law instead of fighting their computers.
That’s who I build software for.
That’s who TimeNet Law is for.
Ready to run your practice on a machine that works as hard as you do?