jove
Member
The following is a rant...
Ever since the beta release I have been waiting for Apple to fix the software update mechanism. Yes, I have sent numerous bug reports to them.
If you, as the administrator of a Macintosh, move one of the Apple installed applications from the Application root, the updater will install pieces of the applications where it expects it to be.
So the result is the existence of not-updated software and mutant packages in the application folder!
End-users have been, for a very long time, moving applications onto their desktop willy-nilly. Run the updater and they have corrupt junk on their machine. Not everybody has a charitable Mac neighbor to fix these things.
I categorize my innumerable applications into 12 sub folders. The dock is used for only the most common. Having all applications in the same directory is unusable. Hey, let's do a flat file system!
The user, who is not warned but actually encouraged to move applications, has to know what the package mutants are and how to repair them. Does it install the incomplete packages if the user has deleted the application?
I just move all apps into the applications root before any updates and resort them after.
This really needs to be of high priority. Warn people about moving an application (just like Windows), make the updater do searches or prompts (like most third party updates), or make the system intelligent enough to know where all the apps are (bringing up a complete listing of apps does not take to long - "open with" and "open dictionary" are good examples).
Ever since the beta release I have been waiting for Apple to fix the software update mechanism. Yes, I have sent numerous bug reports to them.
If you, as the administrator of a Macintosh, move one of the Apple installed applications from the Application root, the updater will install pieces of the applications where it expects it to be.
So the result is the existence of not-updated software and mutant packages in the application folder!
End-users have been, for a very long time, moving applications onto their desktop willy-nilly. Run the updater and they have corrupt junk on their machine. Not everybody has a charitable Mac neighbor to fix these things.
I categorize my innumerable applications into 12 sub folders. The dock is used for only the most common. Having all applications in the same directory is unusable. Hey, let's do a flat file system!
The user, who is not warned but actually encouraged to move applications, has to know what the package mutants are and how to repair them. Does it install the incomplete packages if the user has deleted the application?
I just move all apps into the applications root before any updates and resort them after.
This really needs to be of high priority. Warn people about moving an application (just like Windows), make the updater do searches or prompts (like most third party updates), or make the system intelligent enough to know where all the apps are (bringing up a complete listing of apps does not take to long - "open with" and "open dictionary" are good examples).