Quote:
|
Originally Posted by kainjow Mac developers have a lot more requirements put on them then any other OS in the world. Why? Because Mac users expect good looking applications with slick UI's. Not all developers can do that and have skills in that. Plus, it requires icons, which 99% of programmers can't make, so they have to hire someone. But if they're going to be making a freeware app, they don't want to spend any more money then necessary on it. Mac users are picky. They don't take just any program that does the job. They want it to look good! I think it's sort of hard to grasp when users come from others OSs, especially Linux, in which the entire OS is open source! Mac OS X is not 100% open source, so why should each individual program be? Open source doesn't make full sense unless the OS is open source. Get my drift?  |
I don't agree with most of this. If you're going to make something freeware, most likely you can dig around the Internet and find yourself an icon to "borrow" -- asking permission if necessary. Or use some icon built into the system, as I did with most of the GTK stuff I wrote on my Red Hat machine. Or, better still, take any kind of picture, art, etc., break out The Gimp, and make an icon from that.
I'm not saying everything should be Open Source...I'm just whining about the lack of freeware.
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by kainjow Again, it's the same thing with GUIs. Most Mac OS X users don't care about X11, because there are (usually) far better native alternatives. |
So far I haven't found that to be the case, unless I break out my credit card.
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by kainjow Next time I'd suggest you research the topic first, before spending $1500! Don't just assume the Mac is for you, because lots of other people are switching, especially if you're a techy  |
Now you are dead on here! Haha...I can promise you that I won't be admitting that to my wife.
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by kainjow Maybe iCal is meant to stay open? That's how Mac OS X works best. Give it good enough RAM, and leave all your programs open. That's what I do - I have anywhere from 15-25 open at once. |
I just feel like if they can put a date on an icon, they should have it be correct whether iCal is open or not. Also, it seemed like it wasn't updating even when I left it open, unless I actively used it. I may be wrong there.
I'm trying to get used to keeping lots of windows open, but that seems very unorganized to me. I go back to my complaints about the lack of support for minimized windows.
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by kainjow What kind of "power" are you referring to? You know, Thunderbird is available for Mac OS X.. |
Poor choice of words by me...not really power, just a feature here and there. Labeling messages with a color, or marking as important a la Evolution. Just minor things; I'm sticking with Mail so far. I did try out Thunderbird on the Mac, but, like most of the other multi-platform apps, it didn't quite seem integrated enough.
Thanks for all the discussion; you made your points well.
Dale