I started to write this up as a post, but it got too long, so I posted it as an article on my website:
Mac OS X Pet Peeves
Mac OS X Pet Peeves
Originally posted by paulwhannel
the most memorable for me is that when you do command-f for find, the filename field is not active by default. so, you need to use your mouse to click in it, then go back to the keyboard. obviously an oversight as apple usually gets these things right...
pnw
Originally posted by Doctor Q
I think Apple tried to get "too smart" with file extensions. They tried to have the best of both worlds, hiding them for "convenience" and displaying them "when appropriate". The result? Non-intuitive behavior and user confusion. I've learned to always uncheck the "hide extension" checkbox to keep out of trouble.
Originally posted by Freg3000
It works for me.
But if you've used the beta of 10.3, you'll notice that the speed has significantly increased, and I haven't had any lock-ups, even in the beta version. So when 10.3 comes out, you may want to consider switching back to OS X.Originally posted by latergator116
I dumped Mac os X and switched over to Yellow Dog linux built ecspecially for the Mac(http://yellowdoglinux.com/) It is much faster. Sure Mac os X never freezes but it consatntly locks up and file sharing sucks. Also, 10.2 seems to have more bugs than 10.1.
Since I havent used 10.3 yet, I will give it a try when it comes out.But if you've used the beta of 10.3, you'll notice that the speed has significantly increased, and I haven't had any lock-ups, even in the beta version. So when 10.3 comes out, you may want to consider switching back to OS X.
Originally posted by latergator116
I dumped Mac os X and switched over to Yellow Dog linux built ecspecially for the Mac(http://yellowdoglinux.com/) It is much faster. Sure Mac os X never freezes but it consatntly locks up and file sharing sucks. Also, 10.2 seems to have more bugs than 10.1.
Faster doing what exactly?
If by faster you mean X Windows vs Aqua, you must be running a version of Linux that no one else seems to have. Actually, X Windows has always been my chief complain about all Unix flavors. SGI IRIX had the best version, but it was still lacking. Mac OS X is the only Unix flavor that has solved the GUI paradigm well enough to warrant its usage as a desktop OS.
If by faster you mean the kernel itself, you might be right; but unless you are using your machine as a server, you will never notice the difference.
Originally posted by coolsoldier
... If it would always hide them, they'd work just like the old os 9 typecodes, which I personally would like as long as they were hidden everywhere ...
Originally posted by cubist
... I'd like something like Windows' alt-tab to switch programs. I think Panther's Expose will do the job; looking forward to it. ...
Originally posted by cubist
Blech. The type/creator codes were a horrible feature of older Mac OSs. They're only acceptable if every file you ever use begins and ends its life on the Mac. I had to keep an alias to File Typer on my desktop. Invisibility of critical things is a bad thing from a usability standpoint.
Originally posted by tomf87
Already there... Use COMMAND-TAB to switch programs. If multiple windows are open use COMMAND-` (the tick, not apostrophe) to switch windows.
Originally posted by coolsoldier
It's there, but it doesn't work quite the way it's supposed to. Example:
I have Mail, Safari, and iTunes open. From Safari, if I hit CMD-TAB, it switches to Mail. If I his command tab, again, it switches back to Safari, skipping iTunes completely. It seems that, at least on my system, CMD-TAB only switches between the two most recently used programs, instead of cycling through programs like it should.
Originally posted by latergator116
Well, yellow dog does everything faster. Applications open in 5 seconds or less. It just has an overall faster response.
Well, I'm one of those people that think that the extendion IS the type code, for ex. jpg is the type, it just should always be hidden thats all. I really don't like all this metadata stuff because it gets in the way with other platforms that use flat files...MS Word docs on OS X for example store part of the file in a reasource fork for crying out loud! @_@Originally posted by whooleytoo
I have to disagree here, I think storing type/creator codes as meta-data within the file was the right way to go, and Apple effectively "downgraded" to be more compatible with Windows.
The ability to render a file 'unopenable' just by changing it's name (i.e. it's extension) is frankly ridiculous. And the warning dialog that pops up gets pretty darn tedious too!
I believe the type SHOULD be hidden, as you're not likely to want to change the type without also converting the data contained in the file to match the file type.
IMO
Mike.
What are you opening that takes so long? Most everything opens within a fraction of a second or a second or two with OS X on my PowerBook. The slowest thing is Photoshop, but that is no more than 6 seconds probably.