I would like to save you from the grim fate of getting a mac. Macs will inevitably be more expensive in the long run, due to the total lack of upgradability. (sans, maybe RAM, but that's pretty much it as far as the mac mini and iMacs go) Except, of course, for the high end Mac Pro, but even then, I understand the case is pretty hard to dis-assemble, not to mention the fact that it costs a small fortune to start off with.
It's also a bit of a myth that Macs "Just Work", in my humble opinion. I've had far more trouble trying to get the mac equivalents of my favorite programs to work, than I've had on Windows. (VisualBoy Advance and Terragen and Quake, just for a few examples) I've really come to the conclusion that Macs just work, if you're willing to throw yet more money at them with expensive full price software. Buying and installing Adobe Illustrator is bound to go off fine, but try getting Inkscape to work! Sure, okay, Macs look pretty. But that doesn't equal usability. I really, honestly think that the "Just Works" thing is a rather well executed piece of marketing.
Also - I'd like to stop "Apple Inc." right where he is on "Windows runs so much better on a mac" Compared to what?! I'm sure that if you ran Windows on a quad-core xenon PC with 4gbs of RAM, it'd run superlatively faster than a Core 2 Duo with 2gbs of RAM and integrated graphics.
Finally, if you really insist on Mac OSX, it's right there, available to you as a PC owner. I won't tell you where you can get it, but it's perfectly possible to get hacked DVD images, which will install on any x86 PC that has at least SSE2 instructions (Anything even remotely new, so don't worry about that.). So, the "you can run both with bootcamp on mac" argument is moot, too.
Really finally, I've found, that in default configuration Mac OSX has a HUGE security flaw. It is perfectly possible to boot the computer up in Single user mode, with a simple key combination at boot, which will give any random joe who tries it, full, root (administrator) access to the computer, with no password protection, and no questions asked.
Seriously, PCs are not only cheaper, but far more flexible. They are not governed by one, authoritarian body, the platform, in it's current state is designed for maximum flexibility, due to the large number of manufacturers that wish to produce parts. You'll only be disappointed with your Mac when you find you want to play Crysis, believe me.
P.S. Since when did Macs have built in printers? Seriously Apple Inc, stop looking through rose tinted glasses. >>