posted
There is no iChat AV 1.x. There was a very temporary release of iChat AV that ran on 10.2, and I think I recall something about a paid option for continuing . . .
Yes, such a thing did exist, but it appears to have been discontinued.
I recommend trying Skype for your video conferencing needs . . . except it appears skype's os x client requires 10.3
You bring up a good question though. When I played with OS X I found that I couldn't figure out where anything is. The entire filing system paradigm that made the Mac so user friendly is gone.
So how do you uninstallanything under OS X.x?
Posts: 3735 | Registered: Mar 2002
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(unless it came with an uninstaller, which is very rare)
Also, OS X uses a much more logical layout for things than OS 9, though very different in some ways.
The basics: your files go in your home folder. Applications go in the Applications folder. Most everything else you shouldn't mess with except under direction.
Posts: 15770 | Registered: Dec 2001
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Edit: Trevor, I have several spare copies of 10.3 from when I was a member of the Apple's Student Developer Connection. If you want, I can send you one for free. Email's in the profile.
quote: Most everything else you shouldn't mess with except under direction.
Yeah, I think it was system files I couldn't find/get rid of. There's no system folder. Once I set up the disk as a startup disk under OS X, I couldn't turn it back into plain old storage.
I'm sorry, I've been a Mac fanatic for a long time, but OS X loses everything the Mac was better at than windows.
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posted
I used to feel that way, but I've found that the stability of OS X is worth the UI tradeoff. I agree that the UI tradeoff shouldn't have to be made, but boy is it nice to not have the whole system grind to a halt just because I clicked a menu.
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posted
Some of the UI is definitely a loss, other parts a significant gain. Its partly a matter of taste, of course.
And there is a System folder, it just actually is the System folder, and you should pretty much never, ever touch it. Most of the System-like things you might touch, hypothetically, go in the Library folder (the one in the root level of the hard drive), though generally speaking that stuff should go in the Library folder in your home folder.
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quote:but OS X loses everything the Mac was better at than windows.
Actually it doesn't. It makes Mac Os EVEN better than windows. But, yes it takes some getting used to, becuase it is different than Os 9. I was against the switch at first too. But after a week or so of Os X, and after I got used to it, I started liking Os X A LOT better than os 9. Give it a shot and a little time, and perhaps a help book, and I think it'll grow on you.
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quote:Some of the UI is definitely a loss, other parts a significant gain. Its partly a matter of taste, of course.
Well, the Finder is still broken in some ways, even in Tiger. It gets confused about window contents, location, size, and view style altogether too often to retain any semblance of consistency. In that respect it's definitely lacking compared to the old OS 9 Finder, which is kind of upsetting considering that they've had four years to fix it. It's also still lacking on the performance front.
But there are things about the OS X UI as a whole that are definitely vast improvements (like the aforementioned case of menu scrolling where the entire system doesn't pause while the menu is open).
Luckily I hardly use the finder, myself -- its the Dock, the Terminal, and soon Spotlight that I use, almost always.
Other improvements include the Dock, IMO, the systematization of application menus, the better layout structure of the system, and expose, to name a few.
Though the single biggest improvement is the amazing support for application development. OS X's APIs, IDE, and other improvements have made it possible for people to create many really cool applications with comparative ease.
Close runner up would have to be the *nix integration, though, I love my command line and traditional *nix programs.
edit: oh, and not having to freakin' allocate memory limits by hand!
The Dock is pretty good but I think it could be a lot better. Being able to bind it to the lower-left corner without a hack would be nice -- that way, everything in the Dock would have a consistent position regardless of what apps were running.
(I like things to stay where I put them. )
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posted
Its never been a big deal for me because most anything I commonly run exists in the dock, so things rarely move.
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posted
That's true for me as well, but "rarely move" isn't good enough.
I was scared of the commandline at first. Now I like it, though I don't resort to it all that often.
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posted
of course, my dock is on my left, which works well for me.
And I use the command line all the freakin' time -- there are very few circumstances its not more usable than the gui for things like file management.
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posted
I don't use it enough to remember anything but the basic commands, and the learning curve is steep enough that I'm not terribly interested in scaling it. I use it if I need to manipulate invisible files for some reason (or if I want to poke around inside a bundle and "Show Package Contents" doesn't work) or, occasionally, for little scripts.
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posted
"And I use the command line all the freakin' time -- there are very few circumstances its not more usable than the gui for things like file management."
Russell, you're such a geek. I mean that in a good way, but still...Posts: 37449 | Registered: May 1999
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Yep, I don't bother denying it. I'm much more than a geek, though, I'm also several varieties of nerd .
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Gotta thank you, btw, for mentioned phdcomics in another thread. I've read all the way through them, and the accuracy is FRIGHTENING.
Posts: 4077 | Registered: Jun 2003
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posted
Yeah, I'm not really a dork, though sometimes I play one .
I think the primary usage of the geek/nerd dichotomy involves situations where one is talking about technical geekage and several other areas. Its then easier to describe other interests as nerdish for the purposes of differentiation. When just one or a few subject areas is being discussed, though, they may be all talked about as part of geekdom.
Also, nerd has a stronger association with social ineptness, so saying one is a nerd in a particular area could imply a mild social ineptness based on that capacity, whereas nowadays saying one is a geek does not so much.
In some areas I am a geek, in others a nerd
It really all just comes down to personal usage, of course.
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