Ok, so I have had MacOSX beta for six months. Its very little use to me because I can't print, listen to music or surf the net (doesn't want to connect for some reason). However, I've been getting to know how it works.
It looks great ...but. Here's a simple question from a non technical user.
Exactly what is better about it, for me, than MacOS9?
Yes, yes I have heard about the technical advances. But I've been telling my Windows using freinds for years that the two key advantages of the Mac over Windows are
a) It's a more intuitive system - easier to learn and more flexible in use.
and
b) When it goes wrong, even a complete ignoramus like me can (usually) fix it.
At a stroke, Apple has removed these two key advantages.
It's all very well for you technical types to get off on the technicalities. But if I buy a computer, as a general user, I don't give a damn about any of that. I want to use my computer as a tool, TO DO THINGS WITH. Not as an end in itself.
The 'crunch' is going to come when Apple finally pre-installs OSX
on their hardware as the default operating system.
Because then, rather than the Apple OS being the user-freindly one - it will be Windows that has the advantage.
An example. Apple made a big thing about putting the Apple menu
back in the final release. Except that it hasn't. Unlike all MacOS's up to now you can't keep your key applications there, ready to hand.
Instead, you have either to trawl through the folders and sub-folders to find the application or clutter your desktop with icons (which is messy - and they are usually obscured by the applications you are already running.)
Can you use the dock? Well no - because you have to launch the applications first. All the dock does is act like the drop down menu at the far right of OS9 - and less efficiently because it takes longer for the eye to scan it.
It seems to me that what we have here is symptomatic of our shallow, visually-oriented culture. It looks good. So it is 'cool'. Does it work any better? Well, er, no.
This is a disasterous move for Apple, however good the OS underpinnings are.
It looks great ...but. Here's a simple question from a non technical user.
Exactly what is better about it, for me, than MacOS9?
Yes, yes I have heard about the technical advances. But I've been telling my Windows using freinds for years that the two key advantages of the Mac over Windows are
a) It's a more intuitive system - easier to learn and more flexible in use.
and
b) When it goes wrong, even a complete ignoramus like me can (usually) fix it.
At a stroke, Apple has removed these two key advantages.
It's all very well for you technical types to get off on the technicalities. But if I buy a computer, as a general user, I don't give a damn about any of that. I want to use my computer as a tool, TO DO THINGS WITH. Not as an end in itself.
The 'crunch' is going to come when Apple finally pre-installs OSX
on their hardware as the default operating system.
Because then, rather than the Apple OS being the user-freindly one - it will be Windows that has the advantage.
An example. Apple made a big thing about putting the Apple menu
back in the final release. Except that it hasn't. Unlike all MacOS's up to now you can't keep your key applications there, ready to hand.
Instead, you have either to trawl through the folders and sub-folders to find the application or clutter your desktop with icons (which is messy - and they are usually obscured by the applications you are already running.)
Can you use the dock? Well no - because you have to launch the applications first. All the dock does is act like the drop down menu at the far right of OS9 - and less efficiently because it takes longer for the eye to scan it.
It seems to me that what we have here is symptomatic of our shallow, visually-oriented culture. It looks good. So it is 'cool'. Does it work any better? Well, er, no.
This is a disasterous move for Apple, however good the OS underpinnings are.