
A few servers – old Intel CPUs, 64 to 128 GB of RAM, terabytes of decent storage, and they are running 24 hours a day.A slim Intel NUC “mini-PC” for actual work – Teams, documents, email, chats, the usual IT stuff.I’ve written about the build process for this PC previously here. I use this whenever I work with “real tech” – perhaps coding, migrating, or creating something. A custom-built performance desktop – Intel i9, 64 GB of RAM, a beefy Nvidia RTX GPU, and terabytes of fast storage.For my home office, I have the following devices: I also usually juggle multiple projects at the same time.Īlmost all of my work I can do at home. Typically a project might last anywhere from a week up to a few months, sometimes longer. I work with customers through projects and engagements. In this article, I’ll outline my setup, reasoning, findings, and initial verdict on how switching from Windows to macOS feels. I’m fully immersed in Microsoft services and platforms – Azure, Power Platform, and Windows – for work and leisure. I’ve used Windows since Windows 3.1 before that, I was a prolific MS-DOS user. I’m typing this article on a MacBook Pro 14″ M2 Max device I bought a few days ago.

Thanks for reading my blog! If you have any questions or need a second opinion with anything Microsoft Azure, security or Power Platform related, don't hesitate to contact me.
