completely missed by ksignorini
Um, no you can't. Read what he's trying to do one more time and you'll see that with Column view, this can't be accomplished.
If you look at his attachment, you'll see what he was actually saying (which you did realize in you next post, by this quote doesn't reflect that).
He wants to see the contents of one really deep directory and then find another really deep directory somewhere else at the same time and in the same Finder window. You can't do that with the Finder.
Would you be willing to put money on that? Single Finder window, list view, I
can do anything I would need to do in the finder (I just don't see were I would want to).
Oh, and Windows Explorer IS the default file explorer in Windows. What you mean to say is that a tree view Explorer is not the default. "My Computer" along with your desktop are all part of the Windows Explorer. And all of those windows also carry along with them Internet Explorer capability which is what Microsoft's newest defense in the anti-trust case is all about--that if they remove the Internet Explorer functionality that they will lose the core functionality of the OS (since any Explorer window is simply an extension of Internet Explorer and can not only display web pages but actually USE web code for customization and to display your file lists).
Windows Explorer IS
not the default, Internet Explorer is. Microsoft's products were just fine before making that (bad) move of making the most crash prone of apps part of the Operating System. Windows NT 4.0 was great without having IE part of the OS. And lets not forget that most of those
core functionalities are not only almost never used by actual users, they also have introduce so many security holes and bugs that they have made the system worse than the proposed
featureless version that the states want. In testimony back in 1998-99, it was found that bundling IE produced major instabilities in Windows 98 that were not there in Windows 95. The case was won (before Bush took office) based on the fact that the bundling of IE with Windows was a disadvantage for consumers.
Windows Explorer sure does customization (like text colors and backgrounds) very well because it IS web page based. When you create a customization (of course using the wizard) of an Explorer window it saves the customization as an html file.
And there in lies the problem. Lets, for the sake of argument, say we use IE as a file browser in Mac OS X. I don't use IE in Mac OS X because it crashes within a few minutes of starting it up. That means that if I was browsing my system, part way through it would have crashes, needing me to start over. And like I said earlier, this ability to
customize is not widely used by average users (most of whom would be lost out side of Word anyway). A cool feature that is used by less than 1% of users but adversely effects the other 99% by adding instability is a bad feature (and should be an optional add-on, not an unremovable part of the OS).
Why couldn't the Finder do something similar but use XML since that's the OS X properties default?
I wish they hadn't tried to add all the things they did add. I find that the Finder in Mac OS X is far more crash prone than the Workspace Manager in Rhapsody (which isn't saying much because I have almost never had the Finder crash vs the Workspace Manage
never crashing). I surely won't want something that is that pointless slaped on just to please a few people.
Okay, enough of my anti-bloatware speech.
by nkuvu
Show me how I can do this with one Finder window and I will bless you...
As stated above, you can move things around in the Finder with a single window... I just can see why you would want to.
This whole argument may be moot -- the need to make one window full screen is not what I am arguing. My point is that Explorer can do something that Finder can't, and I'm used to the Explorer method.
And I don't see the advantage of having
that window full screen.
Then I need to ask a very important question... why use a Mac? If I am used to/happy with something, I don't go moving to something else that doesn't do what I like. I don't like the Midnight Commander/Windows Explorer/Nautilus method, which is why I tend not to do much work on systems like that. I
do like the Finder/Workspace Manager type file browser (used in the Mac OS, OPENSTEP, Rhapsody, Mac OS X and Irix). I should be able to browse files while working on three other things at once, so I still don't see the full screen thing as anything other than a major disadvantage.
But again, why use a Mac if it isn't what you want out of a system? I don't see the logic of it.