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Apple update has 'em standing in line for good reason
Chicago Sun Times ^ | 10/28/2003 | ANDY IHNATKO Advertisement

Posted on 10/28/2003 6:03:26 PM PST by Vermonter

After God casually looked up from His desk, glanced at the Cubs and the Red Sox and cleared His throat in a meaningful sort of way before returning to His paperwork, the phenomenon wherein hordes of amped-up souls gleefully line up at all hours to buy something the moment it becomes available retreated to its natural arenas: the next "Lord of the Rings" movie and Panther, Apple's latest major update to Mac OS X.

Yes, people were lined up for Panther. Apple kept its retail stores open until midnight on Friday to accommodate everyone who couldn't contain themselves. Mac users are that kind of people, and Panther (Mac OS X 10.3, if you insist on being boring) is that kind of release.

The most obvious changes are those made to the Finder, Mac OS's utility for navigating, managing and opening files, folders and applications. What made Apple decide that this critical, central app needed to be re-made in the iTunes' metallic image apps? Tequila? Did a faulty thermostat in the office fridge cause the OS team to unknowingly ingest spoiled dairy products over a prolonged period?

Whatever the cause, after spending one entire workday with the metal Finder I'm ready to say that it's the first big mistake Apple's made in Mac OS X's three-year history. The Finder feels clumsy. The basic iTunes interface (in which the left side of a window contains a sidebar of resources and the right side contains items that those resources can act upon) doesn't translate well and no matter how I customize a Finder window, there's still an immense amount of wasted space.

This same basic scheme has been applied to the standard navigation pane that drops down whenever an application saves or opens a document. But here, it's a big improvement on 10.2; opening a file on a server half a world away is as quick and easy as getting it from your Documents folder.

Onward. As a part-time Windows user, I need to make a plea to Microsoft: swipe Expose, Panther's new window manager. Don't even bother being coy. Just throw a concrete block through the glass, grab it, and don't stop running until you get back to Redmond.

Navigating through stacks and stacks of open windows is a nightmare, in Windows as well as Mac OS 10.2. But with Panther, you just hit a key and suddenly, your desktop animates into a screen-filling collage that displays miniatures of every open window and tool palette, with no overlaps. Click on the window you want to work with and the screen obediently reshuffles itself to bring that window to the front.

And each miniature window is "live." If it contains a movie, it'll continue to play. If it contains a Web page, it'll continue to update. Expose is more than a trick for selecting a window: it's one of the Mac's best user-interface refinements of all-time. Steal! This! Idea!

In addition to countless little tweaks to familiar operations, many of OS X's built-apps have been seriously overhauled. I'll single out Panther's new DVD Player: Apple's taken an embarrassingly shabby player and turned it into one of the very best.

Now let's get to the dull stuff. Apple continues to improve Mac OS X's compatibility with Windows networks and resources. Panther adds support of Active Directory and Kerberos authentication. Its mail and address book integrate with Microsoft Exchange servers, and users can exploit Windows-based file servers more fully.

Yet Apple steams ahead in its support of open computing. An X11 server is now built in, which vastly simplifies running open-source Unix apps, like OpenOffice.org.

Not every Mac user is the sort who'd giddily wait in line to buy Apple's latest OS the instant it becomes available, largely sight-unseen. Not for $129, anyway. But Panther delivers considerable and assertive bang for the buck, tempting the sensible wheat side of you that wants new, useful features as well as the sugar-frosted side that wants everything to be fast, easy and cool. It's compelling; it will easily become the Mac's de facto OS by the end of the year.

The next big rev of Windows is still a long ways off. Yet I have no earthly idea if in 2005 they'll be able to produce an OS to match the one that Apple had in 2003.

Andy Ihnatko writes on computer issues for the Sun-Times.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; Technical
KEYWORDS: apple; mac; macuser; macuserlist; osx; panther
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To: unix
http://www.pricegrabber.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=615468/prsrt=1/ut=42a71e6e347f0da1
21 posted on 10/28/2003 7:15:29 PM PST by js1138
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To: js1138
Sweetness...Gracias!

I'm on a SCSI subsystem, but if I can buy some IDE's with good spindle speed, that would suit my needs well from a capacity/storage stand point...

22 posted on 10/28/2003 7:19:14 PM PST by Michael Barnes
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To: unix
Last month, I got a Western Digital 120 gig at a national store for $69.00 (after rebates)
23 posted on 10/28/2003 7:19:54 PM PST by Hillarys Gate Cult ("Read Hillary's hips. I never had sex with that woman.")
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To: unix
What kind of drive (brand) and do you have a site?

http://www.newegg.com/app/viewproduct.asp?description=22-144-122&DEPA=1

80 GB IDE, 7200 RPM 8M cache: Western Digital's "Special Edition"

$75 for a new one, $56.25 for a refurbished one. I wouldn't recommend the refurbished one, but the new one is a great drive (I've bought several).

http://www.newegg.com/app/ViewProduct.asp?submit=property&DEPA=1

A list of all the 80 GB drives they offer, sorted by price. Starts at $69.50 for a WD 7200 RPM with 2MB cache.

http://www.pricewatch.com/1/26/2480-1.htm

Multi-vendor list, starts at $55.48 (after shipping) for a WD 5400 RPM with 2MB cache.

24 posted on 10/28/2003 7:20:34 PM PST by justlurking
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To: Hillarys Gate Cult; justlurking
Thanks for the great info.. I'll keep my SCSI system on my workstation whereas it does most of my work..My file server though; she's a wee bit tight on capacity..Some of these drives can do me nicely without breaking the bank...

</ torrent's are addicting>

25 posted on 10/28/2003 7:24:36 PM PST by Michael Barnes
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To: unix
My standards for price would shock Mac users. Right now my motherboard is a hand-me-down 5-year-old dual PIII-500 abandoned by a CAD jockey. Disk is a 40 gig aquired for $10 at a garage sale. Monitor is a 17 inch Dell, $20, garage sale. Counting the DVD player, SCSI CD burner, 512 megs memory (hand-me-down), Windows 2000 (garage sale) I have about $150 invested.

I collect parts at garage sales until I have enough to build or upgrade.
26 posted on 10/28/2003 7:29:47 PM PST by js1138
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To: js1138
I'm pretty cheap when it comes to comp HW as well...(FWIW, I have owned a Mac, Power Mac 7100/80). I didn't like being locked into only buying certain HW from certain vendors. I love the flexability I have in PC's. And like you say, it's amazing what you can find at flea markets and garage sales; buyer beware of course..

Once my first kid came along, I ditched the "latest and greatest" HW REAL quick. Now it's all about squeezing every last ounce of everybit of hardware I have.

27 posted on 10/28/2003 7:39:18 PM PST by Michael Barnes
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To: js1138
LOL. I inherit my kid's discarded computer stuff. My son is into CAD professionally, so what I get is still good enough to surf. And I do freelance IT, so I get lots of discards.

By the way if you're looking for speed, you can get IBM 9 gig 10,000 rpm SCSI ultra 160 drives for $29. They're discontinued, but widely available. I'm building a RAID 5 server for a client with them.
28 posted on 10/28/2003 7:44:28 PM PST by js1138
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To: ladyinred
I'd think os, but here the system requirements facts:

http://www.apple.com/macosx/upgrade/requirements.html

You're probably safe, but check to be sure.
29 posted on 10/28/2003 7:58:06 PM PST by Freemeorkillme
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To: Vermonter
Apple, Linux? Don't have the users 'cause they don't have the apps, don't have the apps 'cause they don't have the users. Till you can buy 'em in Wal-Mart . . .
30 posted on 10/28/2003 9:40:36 PM PST by jordan8
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To: js1138
Still the computer for the rich of us. I won't comment on the quality. It appears to be there. But Mac continues to plummit in market share.

So does Ferrari. What's your point?

31 posted on 10/28/2003 10:11:32 PM PST by papertyger
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To: afz400
Apple is poised to take over in the next five years IMHO because Microsoft has p*ssed off so many previously loyal customers...

I wouldn't go hocking the jewels to invest in Apple just yet if I were you.

I have learned two profound truths about life:
Never underestimate the ability of people to rationalize bad decisions.
And never underestimate Steve Jobs ability to innovate so far ahead of the curve the buying public has no idea what the hell said innovation is good for.

32 posted on 10/28/2003 10:24:32 PM PST by papertyger
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To: ladyinred
I have a iMac, but it is about 3 years old. Since I am not computer savvy, is there anyway I can buy an OS for mine? I am asking I suppose, if it will run in an older mac?

It will run fine. You SHOULD have some more memory than the 32 Megs the first iMacs were released with, however. But memory is cheap.

33 posted on 10/29/2003 12:50:42 AM PST by Swordmaker
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so waiting in line was "worth it?"

like waiting in line for the next harry potter book...which was available by the dozens the next day at everywhere, including grocery stores?

something for folks to do when they outgrow waiting in line overnight for Air Supply concert tickets
34 posted on 10/29/2003 1:03:36 AM PST by KneelBeforeZod (If God hadn't meant for them to be sheared, he wouldn't have made them sheep.)
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To: Vermonter
i didn't have to stand in line... my copy of Panther was awaiting me when I got home early Friday afternoon... and was installed on my G5 before the sun set!

As to the author's complaint about the revised finder, the use of space in the finder windows is MUCH better than the waste of space in Windows in the same area... Windows just has a few comments, a few links, and a graphic or two in their default "browser" mode. The Mac also doesn'w waste screen acreage by duplicating the menu bar in EVERY BLASTED folder window!

He then goes on to praise the ability of the finder to open or save documents to anyplace... ignoring that those places can be easily added to the window pane he is complaining about... and you can just "drag and drop" the files to the location.
35 posted on 10/29/2003 1:09:36 AM PST by Swordmaker
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To: Vermonter
I would consider buying OSX if they made it work on non apple hardware.
36 posted on 10/29/2003 1:18:25 AM PST by Crispy
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