Never really used Macs before and preferred the Linux + windows combo for work and pay respectively.
Last month I won an Ipad and initially really enjoyed it. Started a new job 2 weeks ago and was given a mac because some aspects may involve programming an iphone. I wad initially was very impressed also. I have slowly ironed out some of the annoyance, remapping home and end keys to my liking, etc (anyone know how to remap the delete key to actually delete a file in FInder, file deletion is already sandboxed by having a trash can, i don't want 2 ke presses to do a simple delete, I mostly use rm form the terminal so having a Trash can is plenty safe enough for me!).
But now my initial feelings are fading as experience more and more issues. In 2 weeks I have experienced 2 kernel warnings from the mac, I could go 2 years in linux and not get an issue.
Take today as an example. Tried to use Facetime with my girlfriend through my ipad, and after 10 minutes the sound cut out so I don't hear a thing. A quick google confirms it is a known issue.
For work I need to to quickly look at some ESRI Shapefiles so looked for a free viewer. The general advice seems to be install bootcamp/parallels + windows and take your pick, or just buy a windows machine. Great. Im used to this using linux a lot, hence I have a windows install also when working or at home. Seems running a Mac doesn't circumvent the lack of software support.
Found some software called QGIS which seems to be very, very sluggish, and then the OS says that it will need to be restarted. Issue number 3 of the day.
A reboot and an hour later (doing other things, mainly just using TextWrangler to view code, nothing taxing) and for some reason the Dock has frozen. Luckily firefox was open i the background, a quick google confirms a known problem, by double luck the terminal was still open so I moved Dock Preference file, found the Dock PID and killed it. It respawned and we back to normal. But really, is the true Mac experience?
On going issues with getting a lot of stuff compiling. Lots of the dependencies my software requires are designed for a straight linux system and there is always a lot of work to get things to compile. The package systems available in Mac are a far cry form apt-get.
Will give Mac OSX another few weeks of fair usage and if this keeps up I will turn my new 27" IMac into an Ubuntu + windows XP machine through bootcamp.
I was really impressed with both the pad and imac but slowly my faith is being eroded.![Frown :( :(](/styles/default/xenforo/vbSmilies/Normal/frown.gif)
Last month I won an Ipad and initially really enjoyed it. Started a new job 2 weeks ago and was given a mac because some aspects may involve programming an iphone. I wad initially was very impressed also. I have slowly ironed out some of the annoyance, remapping home and end keys to my liking, etc (anyone know how to remap the delete key to actually delete a file in FInder, file deletion is already sandboxed by having a trash can, i don't want 2 ke presses to do a simple delete, I mostly use rm form the terminal so having a Trash can is plenty safe enough for me!).
But now my initial feelings are fading as experience more and more issues. In 2 weeks I have experienced 2 kernel warnings from the mac, I could go 2 years in linux and not get an issue.
Take today as an example. Tried to use Facetime with my girlfriend through my ipad, and after 10 minutes the sound cut out so I don't hear a thing. A quick google confirms it is a known issue.
For work I need to to quickly look at some ESRI Shapefiles so looked for a free viewer. The general advice seems to be install bootcamp/parallels + windows and take your pick, or just buy a windows machine. Great. Im used to this using linux a lot, hence I have a windows install also when working or at home. Seems running a Mac doesn't circumvent the lack of software support.
Found some software called QGIS which seems to be very, very sluggish, and then the OS says that it will need to be restarted. Issue number 3 of the day.
A reboot and an hour later (doing other things, mainly just using TextWrangler to view code, nothing taxing) and for some reason the Dock has frozen. Luckily firefox was open i the background, a quick google confirms a known problem, by double luck the terminal was still open so I moved Dock Preference file, found the Dock PID and killed it. It respawned and we back to normal. But really, is the true Mac experience?
On going issues with getting a lot of stuff compiling. Lots of the dependencies my software requires are designed for a straight linux system and there is always a lot of work to get things to compile. The package systems available in Mac are a far cry form apt-get.
Will give Mac OSX another few weeks of fair usage and if this keeps up I will turn my new 27" IMac into an Ubuntu + windows XP machine through bootcamp.
I was really impressed with both the pad and imac but slowly my faith is being eroded.
![Frown :( :(](/styles/default/xenforo/vbSmilies/Normal/frown.gif)
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