It's unscientifically official. PC users are more lame than their Mac-using counterparts.

Looks like that four-year-long, 66-commercial "Get a Mac" campaign had some truth to its stereotypes.
In case you forgot, the commercials pinned a nerdy-looking, suit-wearing John Hodgman as a PC against a younger and supposedly cooler Justin Long as a Mac. (The irony of that whole campaign for me was that Justin Long played a nerdy, wimpish cheerleader in 2004s Dodgeball and an equally nerdy hacker in 2007's Live Free or Die Hard.)
Mac vs PC Hunch
was able to arrive at its conclusions by asking its user base if they
self identified as a Mac or PC person. It then looked their answers to
various other interest-related questions and grouped them with answers
from other users that identified themselves the same way.
It's a gold mine of stereotypes.
CNN's Brandon Griggs said of the survey in his article, "The results suggest Mac users can be seen, depending on your perspective, as bolder and more creative -- or elitist and more pretentious."
Couldn't say it better myself.
Before
I go any further, I should note that I self identify as a PC person,
even though I use a Mac most of the time at work. Like Hunch's data
suggests of PC users, I live in the suburbs, seldom throw parties, am
not a fan of modern art and enjoy the occasional lolcat.
And don't think the irony is lost that this article is appearing on PC World, not Macworld.
Here are a few other notable differences between Apple and PC fanboys:
Make sure to stop by Hunch's blog to check out the rest of the data packaged in an infographic made by Column Five Media.