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- Nov 15, 2011
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- Your Mac's Specs
- MBP 16” M1max 32/1tb and bunch of other mac/apple stuff
maybe I should spring for the vmware 4 upgrade.
LOL... wow!
I just noticed now that VirtualBox has a preset for Windows 8. So, if you're looking to upgrade your VM software, it might not hurt to look at VBox. Interestingly, it defaults to 1GB of RAM which I don't think is even close to enough but we'll see.maybe I should spring for the vmware 4 upgrade.
Well, although the first GUI-based computer I personally owned was a Windows 95 PC - before that I had a couple of oldskool home computers running various flavours of BASIC - I did use some friends' PCs with Windows 3.11 on them before that, and the method of launching apps on that OS was simply selecting the appropriate icon from a folder on the otherwise almost empty desktop!Dennis, I think people like you and I (and maybe even some from Vansmith's generation) that cut their teeth on command lines and early GUI metaphors are going to have a hard time adjusting to "the new order".
I'm not too worried about this. If people managed to figure-out how to Jailbreak iOS - which was designed from the get-go to be locked-down - I'm sure it will be possible to Jailbreak Windows 8, which is built off of a formerly (relatively) open platform.You can develop them with web technologies (HTML, CSS, JS, etc.) or .NET. The problem however is not in the development but in the distribution - Metro apps can only be installed through the Windows Store (see here). This effectively locks people in if they want to use Metro applications.
Oh, I agree. However, sadly, as application-installation locking-down seems to be the way the wind is blowing (Mountain Lion's Gatekeeper is presented as just a "security feature", but I know from reading the posts on this forum that I'm not the only one who's a little dubious about that) - due to OS developers' whims being given more consideration than consumer preferences (just look at the almost condescending attitude of Canonical with regard to user response to the Unity interface in Ubuntu) - I fear it will be necessary; unfair and unreasonable as it may be.True but that leaves us with two questions: why should we have to "jailbreak" our computers and how many average users will know how (or even be familiar with the concept)? From where I sit, these shouldn't even be questions that we're asking.
10.6 (Snow Leopard) will eventually lose support, but it probably won't be for another few years. Apple typically doesn't drop support until 2-3 major subsequent releases have come out.
In my opinion, Lion is a gimicky train wreck of an update that tries to shoehorn a bunch of iPad/iOS-inspired user interface elements where they don't necessarily fit well. Some of the new features actually break existing functionality that had worked very well (Exposé for one example). In addition, other features are dropped entirely (Rosetta for older, PPC-based apps and Front Row support).
Personally, if I could do it easily, I would just roll back to 10.6 and stay there until such a time when Apple releases a real update to OS X that actually improves things instead of adding a bunch of bloat and gimicky, grafted-on changes that make little sense.
I'm certain others will feel differently, but for me, Lion hasn't been an upgrade... I've spent more time finding work arounds and "undoing" things that Apple has changed than actually using my computer, which is something I'm not accustomed to doing with Apple products.
I think it's more to do with preventing accidental damage due to accidental access than a lack of respect for users' intelligence. Microsoft did the same thing with Windows XP, throwing-up a warning when one tried to navigate to the \Windows directory, but still allowing the user to dismiss the message and access it if they so wish.Why...treat us all like idiots so that we have to click on the Alt key in Finder/Go to see Library etc.
The ScrollBars are not gone from Lion. There are 3 settings in fact. On all the time, On when there is a mouse and until you scroll.
Check System Preferences, General.
I agree with Chas in everything except Time machine as it was first introduced in 10.5 Leopard. It's not a LION thing. I have been using it since the day 10.5 was released and love it in fact!
And yes, Time Machine can be disabled also.
The problems I have had with lion on my MacBook Pro 13.3" is that Lion does not like to network with anything other than X-Serve.
How so? I have no troubles connecting to my NAS (which uses Windows SMB), nor any of my Windows XP or 7 machines.