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<blockquote data-quote="Murlyn" data-source="post: 17670" data-attributes="member: 184"><p>1. Kind of a hard question.. there are so many, right now since I don't have Panther.. expose looks like something I REALLY want to try out.</p><p> </p><p> 2. No clue</p><p> </p><p> 3. Not sure what you are talking about, but my guess is that it was a Flash based training system.</p><p> </p><p> 4. Well MacOSX is unix so your examples that you have for unix is indeed what Mac's is also. You can make symlinks which is basically an alias or just a plain ole alias from the GUI.</p><p> </p><p> 5. Just remember that the Mac backbone is unix.. so all those examples for unix is what the MacOS command line does also. So as far as I know those I/O slaves.. we do not have.. kind of a kewl idea though.</p><p> </p><p> I guess the kewlest thing about Mac is it's GUI and how it works with the command line, so that it is seamless and you have no clue anything is going on in the background. So that a user would never have to use the command line if they did not want to.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Murlyn, post: 17670, member: 184"] 1. Kind of a hard question.. there are so many, right now since I don't have Panther.. expose looks like something I REALLY want to try out. 2. No clue 3. Not sure what you are talking about, but my guess is that it was a Flash based training system. 4. Well MacOSX is unix so your examples that you have for unix is indeed what Mac's is also. You can make symlinks which is basically an alias or just a plain ole alias from the GUI. 5. Just remember that the Mac backbone is unix.. so all those examples for unix is what the MacOS command line does also. So as far as I know those I/O slaves.. we do not have.. kind of a kewl idea though. I guess the kewlest thing about Mac is it's GUI and how it works with the command line, so that it is seamless and you have no clue anything is going on in the background. So that a user would never have to use the command line if they did not want to. [/QUOTE]
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