I know. I used Google.
It's not easy to make the switch from PC to Mac. One misses things like a print screen button, use of the home and end keys, stuff like that.
Thank God for Google. W/o Google I would have given up on the Mac I use.
Also, the shift + capslock on Mac's is screwy too.
Given how much confidence you were speaking with earlier about PCs, one would assume that you had more experience with PCs than it seems you do.
I am not so sure that your opinion about the relative merits of one v the other is that well informed.
It's been a while since I made very much use of PCs. From 1986 through 2003, I was a computer programmer/data analyst, working professionally mostly on PCs. Windows didn't even yet exist in any meaningful form at the start of that period. For my own personal use, I always preferred the Macintosh platform. I was the very first person to buy a Macintosh ][ from a dealer in Santa Barbara, and I've had a string of Macintosh's since then. My wife prefers PCs, and has had a string of them in the time we've been together. Currently, I have a ten-year-old Power Mac G4 running MacOS X 10.4.11 “Tiger”, and my wife has a desktop-type PC running Windows XP, and a laptop running Windows 8, and an older laptop running Windows Vista.
So I used to be quite familiar with Windows, up to Windows 2000, and comfortable enough working professionally with it, but never to the point that I didn't find the Macintosh platform to be far preferable for my own personal use. I don't use it much any more. I occasionally use my wife's computers, but mostly, I use my own. When I do have occasion to use my wife's computers, I find myself fumbling around a great deal. Not only is my past experience with Windows rather stale, now, but it seems that Windows has not maintained much consistency from one major version to the next. XP is similar enough to 2000 that I can still work fairly well on it; but Vista is different enough to be confusing; and Windows 8 is, well, it's Windows 8—even my wife is still finding it confusing compared to past Windows versions.
I earlier mentioned Apple's reputation for having a consistent, intuitive user interface, and Apple has managed to maintain it across its entire history. The only really major change in the user interface came with MacOS X, and even then, they did a remarkable job of keeping it easy for someone familiar with “Classic” MacOS 9 and lower to figure out, given how radically-different the underlying operating system is. I suppose it helped me, in making the transition, that I had, at that point, some considerable experience with a NeXT, and was already familiar with the user interface elements that MacOS X inherited from NeXTStep.