Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

What separates a Mac from a PC?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Originally posted by Asher

    Wow, what a complete ripoff of an MS innovation.
    Oh yeah, MS the great UI innovators.

    It's confusing because it doesn't easily separate it. Like for my Trillian conversations, I sometimes have 7-8 windows open at once. How do I easily tell these apart with the Dock and easily switch between them all?
    The last one is on the right and they go back in order. Stick the mouse over it and it will tell you what it is.

    It's not just opening up programs more than once, but windows. The Dock doesn't understand that sometimes people want to flip between windows rather than just programs. Another reason why it's a bad design.
    My way of doing that is clicking on the window I want to look at. Or using the "window" menu if it's obscured. If I have a lot of windows open in one app I can ctrl-click on the program icon and a popup menu will list all the open windows. If I'm one of those people who needs a two button mouse I could buy one so I wouldn't have to click and hold or ctrl click, but big deal.

    I actually think there is a better solution than any so far offered. That is to use tabs. I'm a fan of tabbed browsing and I'd like to see the concept extended.

    Of course there could be a keyboard shortcut - I agree that this should be added to the dock, but it wouldn't take much to do it, and certainly isn't a reason to throw the baby out with the bath water. I still find it easier to use than the Windows taskbar which gets too full to read the labels properly. Of course you could make the taskbar taller, but this looks hideous and makes it harder to find stuff.

    Appeal to authority: Experts who study this (psychologists, HCI specialists) and based on usability research and testing. I don't know, I think that carries more weight than a blind Mac zealot chanting "it's better cause I'm used to it", doncha think?
    Nope. I don't unless they come up with reasons their opinions are so much hot air.

    I did read the "10 reasons the dock sucks". IMHO there are a couple of good points but the rest of it is hopeless whining. One complaint was that it didn't preserve "motor memory" so that if I put stuff in the dock the trash moved to the right and I would find myself moving the pointer too far to the left when I attempted to trash something. The problem with this objection is that it only applies to mental cripples. If you have any sort of motor co-ordination at all this doesn't happen.

    As for "fallacy" of majority belief, you may want to check your market share figures.
    Doesn't stop it being a fallacy.
    Only feebs vote.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by Sava
      Any links to sites that show why QWERTY is bad?
      QWERTY is bad, because it was designed to slow you down to avoid typewriter jams.
      Only feebs vote.

      Comment


      • The Dock is a problem because:
        1) It lacks consistency (the button icons change location as you mouse-over by default)
        2) Lots of wasted screen realestate
        3) Uninformative icons
        4) Mixes both running apps and ability to launch apps to the point where it's needlessly confusing and the only way you can tell if something's running is if there's a little icon on the icon
        5) It gets complicated with multiple instances of the program


        Not a single one of these "problems" is valid. Pretty weak showing, Asher.
        KH FOR OWNER!
        ASHER FOR CEO!!
        GUYNEMER FOR OT MOD!!!

        Comment


        • Originally posted by Agathon
          Oh yeah, MS the great UI innovators.
          In that case, you're right. MS was the first to do the auto-hide thing, as well as have a bar at the bottom of the screen with programs running/launching programs. Apple blatantly ripped that off.

          The last one is on the right and they go back in order. Stick the mouse over it and it will tell you what it is.
          See? That's completely stupid, and not functional.

          In Windows, I've got a list of all of the windows on the taskbar. The circle icon color determines which medium it is (AIM, ICQ, MSN, Y!, etc), and then the person's name is next to it. I can easily see which window is open and click on it, which is far more functional than the dock's method.

          Example:

          If the Windows start getting too cluttered, Windows can (by default and this is optional) group together the program's windows under one entry, called "Trillian", and when you click on it, a list appears above it with all of the active windows and their titles.

          Example:

          You can also use ALT-TAB to scroll through all active programs, with a little screenshot of that window appearing in the center.

          Call me crazy, but I think that's way more functional than having unnamed little icons in a "chronological" order on the dockbar, mixed in with shortcuts to launch programs...

          Drake:
          Not a single one of these "problems" is valid. Pretty weak showing, Asher.

          Feel free to debate, but as usual you're not contributing anything but interjecting randomly and waving your hand, dismissing arguments randomly by calling them "invalid" or some other nonsense.

          If you want to contribute, you're welcome to do so, but you're going to have to explain to those of us who are not mentally deranged why any of those objections to the dock are "invalid".
          Last edited by Asher; May 7, 2003, 20:42.
          "The issue is there are still many people out there that use religion as a crutch for bigotry and hate. Like Ben."
          Ben Kenobi: "That means I'm doing something right. "

          Comment


          • ag, a cd thing that appears on your desktop? that's an icon... so naturally, what appears on your desktop, it itself is a drive icon...

            I can't think of a mac program I'd want to open more than once. In fact I can't think of any reason to do this.

            how about finder or explorer windows?

            Oh yeah, MS the great UI innovators.

            it's not like mac os is that much more innovative:
            1. the innovation for mouse/gui came from xerox;
            2. the innovation of multiple mouse buttons is not mac-native;
            3. the innovation of the way the finder works in mac is taken outright from nextstep;
            4. the innovation of darwin is straight from the bsd world...

            windows does have its moments:
            1. integrating the browser and making it the default file system explorer;
            2. the taskbar first appeared in windows;
            B♭3

            Comment


            • Feel free to debate, but as usual you're not contributing anything but interjecting randomly and waving your hand, dismissing arguments randomly by calling them "invalid" or some other nonsense.

              If you want to contribute, you're welcome to do so, but you're going to have to explain to those of us who are not mentally deranged why any of those objections to the dock are "invalid".


              Agathon already dealt pretty effectively with your dumb reasoning. I just wanted to kick you while you were down.
              KH FOR OWNER!
              ASHER FOR CEO!!
              GUYNEMER FOR OT MOD!!!

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Drake Tungsten
                Agathon already dealt pretty effectively with your dumb reasoning. I just wanted to kick you while you were down.
                Agathon's clearly stumbling around blindly trying to make points without any success, and you're his little cheerleader on the sidelines.

                There's no need to "kick me while I'm down" (since I'm not down), but you can certainly save your own battered ego and abort the silly cheerleading.

                (Once again you display you don't have anything to contribute, because you also don't know what's going on -- otherwise you could actually deal with the points rather than plugging your ears and saying they're invalid, hmm?)
                "The issue is there are still many people out there that use religion as a crutch for bigotry and hate. Like Ben."
                Ben Kenobi: "That means I'm doing something right. "

                Comment


                • The Dock is a problem because:
                  1) It lacks consistency (the button icons change location as you mouse-over by default)


                  You can shut off the magnification quite easily. You don't even need to go to a control panel; just control-click on the Dock and the preference menu will pop up for you. It takes all of 1 second to change and then you have all the consistency you want.

                  2) Lots of wasted screen realestate


                  You can hide it as Agathon said. You can also adjust its size if you don't like the hiding feature, like me.

                  3) Uninformative icons




                  The big, beautiful OS X icons are better than anything Windows has to offer.

                  4) Mixes both running apps and ability to launch apps to the point where it's needlessly confusing and the only way you can tell if something's running is if there's a little icon on the icon


                  As Ag said, all you have to do to tell if an app is launched or not is look at the Dock. That's not a problem for all non-retards.

                  5) It gets complicated with multiple instances of the program


                  Why the hell would you want to run multiple instance of the program? The Mac OS is set up in such a way that such absurdity isn't necessary.

                  There, I countered all your moronic points. Happy now?
                  KH FOR OWNER!
                  ASHER FOR CEO!!
                  GUYNEMER FOR OT MOD!!!

                  Comment


                  • Originally posted by Drake Tungsten


                    The big, beautiful OS X icons are better than anything Windows has to offer.
                    The difference being Apple thinks all its users are morons (which is true, to an extent ) and thinks they can't read. So all they have is purty little pictures to tell what a program is.

                    In the Windows world, we've got icons and descriptive text, which is actually much more functional.

                    As Ag said, all you have to do to tell if an app is launched or not is look at the Dock. That's not a problem for all non-retards.
                    As I've said, that's not the issue. Apps that are running and apps that are not running are two separate things, mixing them together is just...wrong. Counter-intuitive. You may be used to it now, and I'm sure anyone can be once you start using it, but this is why Apple's marketshare only continues to shrink. Everyone else looks at it and thinks "what the ****?" and Apple fans jump up and down crying about how it's great and you "get used to it".

                    Why the hell would you want to run multiple instance of the program? The Mac OS is set up in such a way that such absurdity isn't necessary.
                    Oh gee, I don't know.
                    1) Multiple internet browser instances (so plugins or whatever don't bring down all your windows if there's a crash)
                    2) Multiple AIM/ICQ/MSN programs
                    3) Multiple file browser/finder windows
                    4) etc
                    You see, the Windows world is advanced enough to allow you to do both, while the Apple world doesn't think its users can handle that (or maybe their OS can't handle it), so they restrict you to only one instance at a time.

                    There, I countered all your moronic points. Happy now?
                    Quite, they're precisely what I expected.
                    "The issue is there are still many people out there that use religion as a crutch for bigotry and hate. Like Ben."
                    Ben Kenobi: "That means I'm doing something right. "

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Agathon
                      QWERTY is bad, because it was designed to slow you down to avoid typewriter jams.
                      Jamming in typewriters was caused by pressing two letters that were close together down at the same time (or one after the other). As such, the QWERTY keyboard layout combatted this by moving often-used keys away from each other so that you could type fast without jamming.
                      I'm building a wagon! On some other part of the internets, obviously (but not that other site).

                      Comment


                      • are mac users so dense that they dont understand why someone would want to run multiple instances of the same program? or are they still coming to grips with being able to run more than one program at the same time?
                        "I hope I get to punch you in the face one day" - MRT144, Imran Siddiqui
                        'I'm fairly certain that a ban on me punching you in the face is not a "right" worth respecting." - loinburger

                        Comment


                        • Hell, I make multiple virtual computer environments on my system, let alone multiple programs.
                          I'm building a wagon! On some other part of the internets, obviously (but not that other site).

                          Comment


                          • In the Windows world, we've got icons and descriptive text, which is actually much more functional.


                            The Dock has descriptive text as well.

                            Apps that are running and apps that are not running are two separate things, mixing them together is just...wrong.


                            Good logic. The Dock is obviously flawed because you think it is just... wrong.

                            3) Multiple file browser/finder windows


                            I do this all the time.

                            As I said before, pretty weak showing Asher.
                            KH FOR OWNER!
                            ASHER FOR CEO!!
                            GUYNEMER FOR OT MOD!!!

                            Comment


                            • Originally posted by Drake Tungsten
                              The Dock has descriptive text as well.
                              Can you post a screenshot?
                              I don't mean mouse-overs.

                              Good logic. The Dock is obviously flawed because you think it is just... wrong.
                              The Dock is flawed because it reduces productivity (no easy way to flip to specific windows, only programs), no ways to launch multiple instances of a program, lame icons instead of icons + text, mixing launched/unlaunched program into one random-mix bag.

                              That's why it's wrong.

                              It's designed to look pretty have basic functionality, and that's it. Sure, by jumping through a bunch of hoops you can accomplish nearly the same things, but it's far less functional and efficient than the Windows taskbar design ("which Apple stole the concept from, and did a half-assed job of it" )

                              I do this all the time.
                              Sure, but only because the program just added new threads. How do you switch to the windows? You need to go up to the Windows menu, right? How stupid.

                              As I said before, pretty weak showing Asher.
                              Pretty weak? Your whole argument was annihilated several times over. You just don't realize it.
                              "The issue is there are still many people out there that use religion as a crutch for bigotry and hate. Like Ben."
                              Ben Kenobi: "That means I'm doing something right. "

                              Comment


                              • Originally posted by Skanky Burns
                                Jamming in typewriters was caused by pressing two letters that were close together down at the same time (or one after the other). As such, the QWERTY keyboard layout combatted this by moving often-used keys away from each other so that you could type fast without jamming.
                                This is a text book example of an old technology standard standing in the way of newer technological efficiency. By WW1 type writters had advanced to the point where jamming was not as big an issue as it previously had been and several enterprising people went out and designed a keyboard which would speed up typing by puting the most commonly used keys close together at the center of the key board. Novices who paid to take blind tests and people found the new keyboard to be much faster and easier to use but people who had already learned the old key board (which remember was designed specifically to slow typers down so as to prevent jams) didn't want to relearn how to type and refused to switch over.

                                Thus we still have a keyboard which was designed in the 1880s for the sole purpose of making it hard for people to type quickly.
                                Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X