It's been over a month: and I'm still using a Mac.
I spent my Spring Break using nothing but PCs, and although I had been using PCs all throughout my 1-month Macdate period my break was the first time that I had used nothing but PCs for an entire week. It was necessary for me to move back to exclusive PC usage for a bit in order to truly confirm what I had felt about OS X; I needed to make sure that I wasn't simply being blinded by something new.
The first thing I realized when moving back to a PC was that having a single application open that takes up the entire screen is a mental blessing and a productivity curse. For example, right now I'm typing this blog in a text editor window under OS X surrounded by and overlapping at least 8 other windows - on this monitor alone. The majority of those windows have a decent amount of text in them and it can get a bit draining staring at everything at once (it's also too cumbersome to minimize every window individually). In a situation like this one, a single maximized application is much easier to focus on. I found myself enjoying running Word and writing a document more under Windows XP, as long as I wasn't trying to do anything else.
Once I got to doing some more serious work, then I began to really miss OS X. Case in point: using any application where multiple windows are open. I missed Exposé like you would not believe. For whatever reason I didn't miss Exposé much when I was at school on my laptop (although I did consciously hit F10 a few times just to bring back good memories), but without my daily fix of Exposé I was going stir crazy. I had a handful of IE windows open on the PC I was using and searching through all of them to find the one I wanted was so painful. I ALT-TABBED and held ALT down forever as I tried to remember which browser window I wanted. Granted a tabbed browser like Firefox would alleviate some of those issues but unfortunately not all apps are tabbed and there are a lot of cases where I use both tabs and multiple windows to be efficient.
The next conclusion I came to was that as nice as the Apple keyboard looks, I still prefer a good MS Natural keyboard. Although I know you can remap the Windows keys to Apple keys it would be nice to have something better directly from Apple. As far as input devices go, Apple just seems to have gotten it very wrong with the G5. The single button mouse receives so much criticism it can't possibly be helping Apple; I was talking to someone the other day who completely opposed getting an Apple out of the principle that their machines come by default with no more than a single button mouse. It seems like a silly reason to rule out an entire platform, but the fact of the matter is that a lot of people are turned off by it. While Apply couldn't get away with a single-key keyboard, the keyboard is definitely form-over-function and thus I'm not a big fan of it. Plus, white isn't the best color for a heavily used keyboard.
I'm not a fan of the organization (or lack thereof) of folders under OS X, or maybe it's just that I'm not familiar enough with the directory structure of OS X yet to feel at home. I find myself putting far too much important stuff on the desktop and not enough elsewhere, mostly because I don't know where I really want to put it. I find that the Save dialog boxes are too small, only showing me a handful of folders at a time as opposed to what I'm used to under Windows.
I just can't seem to bring myself to use Firefox; it's a great browser but the keyboard shortcuts are different from all my other OS X apps and there are more page rendering issues with Firefox that I've noticed than with Safari. I was hoping that the latest OS X update (10.3.3) would bring me a faster Safari but my wishes weren't granted as Safari still renders pages entirely too slowly. What's also annoying is that the auto-complete of URLs that you all taught me doesn't always seem to work instantaneously. Just typing anandtech and hitting enter will usually just tack on a www. and a .com around the word but sometimes it sits there and contemplates what it is doing before taking any action. I'm a performance nut and a big part of having a fast system is making sure that everything is as responsive as possible, this one little thing irks me beyond belief. Oh and I'd like a faster rendering Safari anytime now :)
The more I have to use Adobe Reader the more I really, really appreciate Apple's Preview. I was talking to a die-hard PC user friend of mine today and even he was envious watching me use Preview instead of Reader for my PDF browsing. I do wish there was a way to be in a directory with images and have Preview flip through the images for me without having to highlight them all and open them that way. I used to use ACDSee to do this back before Windows XP had it built in, but it would be nice to have under OS X as well (unless there's some way I'm not considering).
I have yet to find a ftp client that fulfills all of my needs. The only remaining requirement that would seal the deal for my comfort with any OS X ftp client: implicit SFTP support (Port 990). I have yet to find a (good) client that supports implicit SFTP. I have found a couple, but they either crash a lot or they look like they were developed for Mac OS back in the 80s. Any recommendations?
During my Macless period I did use an iMac for a very brief period; for basic email and browsing the iMac was fine, but then again I didn't try to really push the system hard at all. Just today I was stuck using a G4 1GHz on campus and that was an extremely painful experience. The system was using OS X 10.2 and thus didn't have a lot of the features I was used to, not to mention that the default web browser was IE (IE for the Mac is *horrible*). The system had 512MB of RAM but it was slow as a dog (granted it wasn't as sluggish as some of the old Willamette based Pentium 4s (1.7GHz) that were sitting around the lab I was in) but it was horrendous. The system had Adobe Reader set to view PDFs (not Preview) and Safari would crash if you tried to run it, which brings up an interesting point: if I had never used a Mac and that was my first experience, I would never ever touch one of these things. The OS was also configured much differently than my copy of 10.3.3 is configured, for example Command + Tab didn't bring up a Windows-like bar of all the applications open, instead it just highlighted applications in the Dock. If Apple is to ever get back above the 2% market share they are at right now, even the worst systems out there in the public need to be configured much better than this one was. It's not Apple's fault, rather the fault of sysadmins for these labs, but maybe Apple's success isn't at the top of their priority list.
Multitasking on the G4 was a joke compared to the G5, although the minimize animations were surprisingly smooth, switching between Adobe Reader and MS Word sometimes took at least a full second before the application I switched to actually appeared on the screen. Again, if that were my first experience with a Mac, I would've vowed against ever touching the platform. It was quite satisfying to be able to hop on the G4 and be just as comfortable as I am under Windows, which is something I've never been able to do in the past. If anything, the fact that this experiment has enabled me to do just that is extremely rewarding. I used to have no problem if the only open computer in a computer lab happened to be a Mac, I would just remain frustrated while using it, but now I can feel oddly at home with the situation - while criticizing the lab systems for much more than just being a Mac.
Someone once asked if I felt any more secure knowing that there were no viruses or OS exploits that I needed to worry about while using OS X. It definitely feels nice, but I'm not getting too comfortable - if the Apple market expands, we'll definitely have OS X's fair share of destructive programs.
Given that I've used the G5 for more than a month now, what are some things I'm still getting used to?
1) Page up and Page Down don't actually take your cursor up/down a page, they just scroll. This is quite useful, but I'm not used to it yet. Command + Up/Down does the same thing Page Up/Down does in Windows.
2) I would be used to home/end not functioning the same way they do in Windows, except for the extremely annoying fact that they do work like they do in Windows while using any MS Office application for OS X. I'm not normally a critic of Microsoft (I tend to like their products), but damn you Microsoft for not complying in an environment that's not your own.
3) Not being able to hit Windowskey + R to be my starting point for navigating my hard drive. Yes, I know, install LaunchBar; I will...soon.
4) iCal - I just can't bring myself to use it.
But honestly, that's about it. Frightened? I'm not, I like being proficient with another OS/platform. And I have enough other PCs in the house to handle my gaming or any sort of tweaking needs I have to fulfill. The G5 will most likely remain my AT-Work machine.
What's next? There's a lot more, but I've made a few definite decisions:
1) I'm keeping the G5. (cmon, as "cool" as it is to jump on the AppleSucks bandwagon, when have I ever come off as a fanboy?)
2) There will be an AT Mac section.
3) I will continue this blog, although I'm not certain what direction it will take - it may eventually get moved (at least the Macdates) to the AT Mac section.
I apologize for the delay in the Macdate, and for those of you who are bored by my ramblings I apologize for the length. As I mentioned at the beginning of this experiment, there will be an article summarizing all of this (and more). When will it be published? Most likely after the new site launches and I actually have some time to put a good amount of effort into it. School is over (and I mean *over*) for me after May 11th, but hopefully I'll have some time before then to get this thing polished and out.
That's it for now, more Macdates later.
I spent my Spring Break using nothing but PCs, and although I had been using PCs all throughout my 1-month Macdate period my break was the first time that I had used nothing but PCs for an entire week. It was necessary for me to move back to exclusive PC usage for a bit in order to truly confirm what I had felt about OS X; I needed to make sure that I wasn't simply being blinded by something new.
The first thing I realized when moving back to a PC was that having a single application open that takes up the entire screen is a mental blessing and a productivity curse. For example, right now I'm typing this blog in a text editor window under OS X surrounded by and overlapping at least 8 other windows - on this monitor alone. The majority of those windows have a decent amount of text in them and it can get a bit draining staring at everything at once (it's also too cumbersome to minimize every window individually). In a situation like this one, a single maximized application is much easier to focus on. I found myself enjoying running Word and writing a document more under Windows XP, as long as I wasn't trying to do anything else.
Once I got to doing some more serious work, then I began to really miss OS X. Case in point: using any application where multiple windows are open. I missed Exposé like you would not believe. For whatever reason I didn't miss Exposé much when I was at school on my laptop (although I did consciously hit F10 a few times just to bring back good memories), but without my daily fix of Exposé I was going stir crazy. I had a handful of IE windows open on the PC I was using and searching through all of them to find the one I wanted was so painful. I ALT-TABBED and held ALT down forever as I tried to remember which browser window I wanted. Granted a tabbed browser like Firefox would alleviate some of those issues but unfortunately not all apps are tabbed and there are a lot of cases where I use both tabs and multiple windows to be efficient.
The next conclusion I came to was that as nice as the Apple keyboard looks, I still prefer a good MS Natural keyboard. Although I know you can remap the Windows keys to Apple keys it would be nice to have something better directly from Apple. As far as input devices go, Apple just seems to have gotten it very wrong with the G5. The single button mouse receives so much criticism it can't possibly be helping Apple; I was talking to someone the other day who completely opposed getting an Apple out of the principle that their machines come by default with no more than a single button mouse. It seems like a silly reason to rule out an entire platform, but the fact of the matter is that a lot of people are turned off by it. While Apply couldn't get away with a single-key keyboard, the keyboard is definitely form-over-function and thus I'm not a big fan of it. Plus, white isn't the best color for a heavily used keyboard.
I'm not a fan of the organization (or lack thereof) of folders under OS X, or maybe it's just that I'm not familiar enough with the directory structure of OS X yet to feel at home. I find myself putting far too much important stuff on the desktop and not enough elsewhere, mostly because I don't know where I really want to put it. I find that the Save dialog boxes are too small, only showing me a handful of folders at a time as opposed to what I'm used to under Windows.
I just can't seem to bring myself to use Firefox; it's a great browser but the keyboard shortcuts are different from all my other OS X apps and there are more page rendering issues with Firefox that I've noticed than with Safari. I was hoping that the latest OS X update (10.3.3) would bring me a faster Safari but my wishes weren't granted as Safari still renders pages entirely too slowly. What's also annoying is that the auto-complete of URLs that you all taught me doesn't always seem to work instantaneously. Just typing anandtech and hitting enter will usually just tack on a www. and a .com around the word but sometimes it sits there and contemplates what it is doing before taking any action. I'm a performance nut and a big part of having a fast system is making sure that everything is as responsive as possible, this one little thing irks me beyond belief. Oh and I'd like a faster rendering Safari anytime now :)
The more I have to use Adobe Reader the more I really, really appreciate Apple's Preview. I was talking to a die-hard PC user friend of mine today and even he was envious watching me use Preview instead of Reader for my PDF browsing. I do wish there was a way to be in a directory with images and have Preview flip through the images for me without having to highlight them all and open them that way. I used to use ACDSee to do this back before Windows XP had it built in, but it would be nice to have under OS X as well (unless there's some way I'm not considering).
I have yet to find a ftp client that fulfills all of my needs. The only remaining requirement that would seal the deal for my comfort with any OS X ftp client: implicit SFTP support (Port 990). I have yet to find a (good) client that supports implicit SFTP. I have found a couple, but they either crash a lot or they look like they were developed for Mac OS back in the 80s. Any recommendations?
During my Macless period I did use an iMac for a very brief period; for basic email and browsing the iMac was fine, but then again I didn't try to really push the system hard at all. Just today I was stuck using a G4 1GHz on campus and that was an extremely painful experience. The system was using OS X 10.2 and thus didn't have a lot of the features I was used to, not to mention that the default web browser was IE (IE for the Mac is *horrible*). The system had 512MB of RAM but it was slow as a dog (granted it wasn't as sluggish as some of the old Willamette based Pentium 4s (1.7GHz) that were sitting around the lab I was in) but it was horrendous. The system had Adobe Reader set to view PDFs (not Preview) and Safari would crash if you tried to run it, which brings up an interesting point: if I had never used a Mac and that was my first experience, I would never ever touch one of these things. The OS was also configured much differently than my copy of 10.3.3 is configured, for example Command + Tab didn't bring up a Windows-like bar of all the applications open, instead it just highlighted applications in the Dock. If Apple is to ever get back above the 2% market share they are at right now, even the worst systems out there in the public need to be configured much better than this one was. It's not Apple's fault, rather the fault of sysadmins for these labs, but maybe Apple's success isn't at the top of their priority list.
Multitasking on the G4 was a joke compared to the G5, although the minimize animations were surprisingly smooth, switching between Adobe Reader and MS Word sometimes took at least a full second before the application I switched to actually appeared on the screen. Again, if that were my first experience with a Mac, I would've vowed against ever touching the platform. It was quite satisfying to be able to hop on the G4 and be just as comfortable as I am under Windows, which is something I've never been able to do in the past. If anything, the fact that this experiment has enabled me to do just that is extremely rewarding. I used to have no problem if the only open computer in a computer lab happened to be a Mac, I would just remain frustrated while using it, but now I can feel oddly at home with the situation - while criticizing the lab systems for much more than just being a Mac.
Someone once asked if I felt any more secure knowing that there were no viruses or OS exploits that I needed to worry about while using OS X. It definitely feels nice, but I'm not getting too comfortable - if the Apple market expands, we'll definitely have OS X's fair share of destructive programs.
Given that I've used the G5 for more than a month now, what are some things I'm still getting used to?
1) Page up and Page Down don't actually take your cursor up/down a page, they just scroll. This is quite useful, but I'm not used to it yet. Command + Up/Down does the same thing Page Up/Down does in Windows.
2) I would be used to home/end not functioning the same way they do in Windows, except for the extremely annoying fact that they do work like they do in Windows while using any MS Office application for OS X. I'm not normally a critic of Microsoft (I tend to like their products), but damn you Microsoft for not complying in an environment that's not your own.
3) Not being able to hit Windowskey + R to be my starting point for navigating my hard drive. Yes, I know, install LaunchBar; I will...soon.
4) iCal - I just can't bring myself to use it.
But honestly, that's about it. Frightened? I'm not, I like being proficient with another OS/platform. And I have enough other PCs in the house to handle my gaming or any sort of tweaking needs I have to fulfill. The G5 will most likely remain my AT-Work machine.
What's next? There's a lot more, but I've made a few definite decisions:
1) I'm keeping the G5. (cmon, as "cool" as it is to jump on the AppleSucks bandwagon, when have I ever come off as a fanboy?)
2) There will be an AT Mac section.
3) I will continue this blog, although I'm not certain what direction it will take - it may eventually get moved (at least the Macdates) to the AT Mac section.
I apologize for the delay in the Macdate, and for those of you who are bored by my ramblings I apologize for the length. As I mentioned at the beginning of this experiment, there will be an article summarizing all of this (and more). When will it be published? Most likely after the new site launches and I actually have some time to put a good amount of effort into it. School is over (and I mean *over*) for me after May 11th, but hopefully I'll have some time before then to get this thing polished and out.
That's it for now, more Macdates later.
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Anonymous - Tuesday, March 23, 2004 - link
"I'm not a fan of the organization (or lack thereof) of folders under OS X, […] I find myself putting far too much important stuff on the desktop and not enough elsewhere, mostly because I don't know where I really want to put it."In Mac OS =9 it was pretty much expected that you would feel better making your own directory structure. I always liked that more than the having windows suggest things to me.
"Just today I was stuck using a G4 1GHz on campus"
even being a mac user i avoid macs in labs. They always seem to be terribly abused. I think it's a conspiracy. : )
"There will be an AT Mac section."
Good. the state of mac hardware reviews and benchmarks is terrible.
And yes, apple has been expending huge amounts of effort on developing OS X. I'd say that in 4 years it's matured (in some areas) about the amount that other OSs (specifically, classic mac os) would in 10. (you should find 10.0 somewhere, then again thats the same as asking for torture). the flip side of that improvement tho is that its 10 years of changes crammed into 4
Daryl - Tuesday, March 23, 2004 - link
Anand, thanks for the great work and for keeping an open mind. Many PC users just flat-out hate Apple anr/or the Mac OS, and many Mac users are apologists who cannot criticize Apple or Mac OS X even where just criticisms are warranted.It's SO nice to read an even-handed commentary, especially with the perspective of a lifelong (and VERY technically savvy) PC user.
I own, use, and like both platforms. I strongly favor the Mac these days (due 100% to Mac OS X) and use one (dual 1.0 GHz G4, soon to be a dual 2.X GHx G5) for all of my personal stuff, and have a PC (a 3.0 GHz P4C Dell) for work (I'm a Windows (C/C++ and Win32/MFC/OpenGL/MySQL) software developer). I find your comments to align squarely with my own feelings about both platforms.
Thanks again for your grand experiment and for letting us all in on its progress and results!
Anonymous - Tuesday, March 23, 2004 - link
If the amount of window ever does become too distracting just go to application>hide others.Anonymous - Tuesday, March 23, 2004 - link
Some tips:1. Keep your documents inside your "Home" folder. Here are some navigational shortcuts in Finder:
command-shift-h: go to Home folder
command-shift-c: go to the toppest directory of your mac.
command-shift-f: go to Favorite folder
command-shift-g: to manually type the path of the directory you'd like to be
command-shift-n: create new folder
command-arrow up: go up one directory
command-arrow down: open the selected folder
2. These shortcuts work inside Open/Save dialog boxes. Also, you can maximize the dialog box by dragging the handle on the bottom-right of the box. Some dialog boxes have maximize button.
Some other navigational shortcuts (these work in finder only):
command-1: switch to thumbnail view
command-2: switch to list view
command-3: switch to column view (my favorite)
3. FTP client: I concur Transmit from http://www.panic.com
BZ - Tuesday, March 23, 2004 - link
As a long time Mac user, I really enjoyed reading your mac-month-blog and am looking forward to your Mac area on the site. While there are some good sites out there (BareFeats, XLR8), there is room for another, more 'professional' opinion in the area. As someone who not only buys Macs but upgrades them (WOOOH!), I like reading about the next best thing.Keep up the great work.
BZ
Em - Tuesday, March 23, 2004 - link
Also, once you have discovered the little file browser widget in open/save dialogs, there's another treat that people don't often use: you can do your navigating in the finder, and then drag the file/folder you want onto the open/save dialog to select it. Remember that you have live searching in the toolbar of finder windows. Of course, one thing Apple missed in o/s dialogs is a file type filter -- but I think that can actually be a good thing to miss from a usability standpoint.Em - Tuesday, March 23, 2004 - link
On the mac, the easiest way to do FTP/SSL is to use an ssl tunnel for your FTP connection. Then you can use any client. I know, this adds an extra step, but it's great for sites you go to regularly.maxplanar - Tuesday, March 23, 2004 - link
Thanks Anand, your month's commentary was really really good. I really look forward to reading your continuing life as a Mac user. Welcome, how can we help?Anonymous - Tuesday, March 23, 2004 - link
Couple of things you might want to try:1. System Prefs - Scroll to Here
2. Finder Prefs - Clicking the Finder icon in the Dock creates new Home folder
3. Springloaded folders in the sidebar - hold items over a sidebarred item (click Space Bar to open immediately)
4. Finder View Options / Icon View - SHow icon preview, and 128x128 icon size
5. Navigate your file structure using Column View, but Command+double-click your folder to open in its own window. Then, depending upon contents, use List View for more information or Icon View to see large icon preview (#4, above).
6. The Library folders are there mainly for applications to store supporting data (prefs, fonts, etc). Keep your stuff in your ~/Documents, Movies, Music, Pictures, Public, and Sites folders.
7. Did you get a .Mac account? Many applications (including the Finder) acquire additional features with .Mac.
8. Did you set up and use the AppleScript Menu? There are numerous and very handy scripts available from Apple's AppleScript site.
9. Using iCal, you can schedule files to open, run AppleScripts, start and stop iTunes,...etc.
10. You made no mention of the Finder's built-in live type to find feature. This has changed the way I use and organize my files. Who needs to go looking around for a file when all you have to do is start typing its name and...oh, there it is.
11. Select your Documents folder. Do a Show Info (Cmd+I). On the Show Info panel, disclose the Index pane. Index your Documents folder. You can now use Find... (Cmd+F) in the Finder to Search by Contents. I lived by this feature during my college days (called DigitalLibrarian in NeXTSTEP).
12. Although it's still in Beta (a little slow and a little buggy) OmniWeb 5 has a fantastic feature set matched to a fantastic interface. My favorite browser.
MacDuff - Tuesday, March 23, 2004 - link
> command shift c, h, u, a only work in the Finder.That's incorrect. It works in Open and Save File dialog windows, too. :)
And yes, Anand, you can resize the open/save dialog windows.
As for getting around the drive easily, you can drag any folder (or file for that matter) to not only the Dock but also the Finder window's "Location" sidebar. Any way you choose to populate the Finder window's Location sidebar will ALSO appear in all open/Save dialog windows. It can't get any easier than that.
Oh, and don't forget that, if you have Docked folders, you can click-hold on them, and they will pop up a la the Windows Start Menu. you'll notice however that there's a slight pause before the contents of the folder pops up. you can eliminate this pause by holding down the Control key while clicking -- or right-clicking, if you have a multi-button mouse that has the Control-click set as any mouse button.
Great experiment using the Mac, Anand. I'm pleased that you're pleased.