Thoughts of a returning switcher

Soldato
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Norwich
I thought some people might appreciate my views on a switch to Mac, and then back again. Anyway, the first thing I feel is important is my general background- From the start, I've always had two PCs/ installs: One Windows for gaming, and one Gnome based Linux laptop for anything else. The very original laptop I had was a Thinkpad 560 (12", P100), and I've still never found anything to compare to it.
Six months ago, I decided to replace the relatively cheap Toshiba I was using at the time, and the choice came down to a Thinkpad or a Macbook Pro (The top-speced variant!). In the end, I went with the Macbook Pro, as the idea was to give a Unix based OS with the ability to compile in the apps I had been using under Linux. This never really happened- The OSX integration is subtly different enough to mean that a a dedicated build is very often necessary.

Now though, I've just had the opportunity to play with a recent Thinkpad, and I've decided to move back in that direction- I miss a lot of Linux stuff, especially Gnome, and some of my little niggles with the Macbook Pro hardware don't come up with a Thinkpad. Below are my thoughts on my experience, both good and bad.

Pros:
*OSX really is a nice OS to use generally. Everything is very integrated, and it normally works out of the box.
*The hardware is above the standard cheap laptop by some margin, but below the Thinkpad I'm moving back to.
*Related- The backlit keyboard is quite nice, but a little gimmicky at times.
*The finder is second to none- Windows explorer & Nautius simply cannot compete in this regard.
*There were two deal-making games on OSX- World of Warcraft & the Football Manager series. There are also more games generally than for a Linux box.
*The bundled apps are incredibly polished, and anywhere else, you'd probably expect to pay for them ;)
*Standardised theme- This comes in both the pros and the cons section, as while everything matches and looks quite nice, there is no real way to change everything consistantly to match my personal preferences.

Cons:
*I want to murder whoever put a single mouse button on Mac laptops :p There are a huge number of uses for right-click, and even thier wired mice have more than one mouse button. This is one of my biggest annoyances. I also hate the trackpad- This has been the first laptop I've had without a trackpoint, and it has irritated me no end.
*The Mac keyboard is nice, yes, but those on the Thinkpads are in a different league.
*The power cord, while a nice idea and perhaps useful for some is simply a pain in the rear.
*There is something that almost equates to a sense of arrogance- If you don't like the way something is done, there is no way to change it. The classic example of this is the inflexibility of the menu bar/ dock; I would have much preferred to swap them round, but this isn't possible.
*The menu bar annoys me. Not sure why, it just does; I much prefer a customised 3 start-type menus system and window selector.
*No programs menu- To me, this is another almost inexcusable problem. You either have to keep apps in the dock or ferret through the apps folder; There is no way to have a simple menu with your apps subcategorised in it.
*The way the wireless works is simply a pain- Why is there no way to show a list of wireless networks with signal strength etc. and select which you want to connect to?
*Standardised theme- This comes in both the pros and the cons section, as while everything matches and looks quite nice, there is no real way to change everything consistantly to match my personal preferences.

Thanks for reading this ramble, and your thoughts & comments are appreciated.

-Leezer-
 
Not a bad taste as such, just the little irritations which mean that its not quite for me.
A lot of these things really do smack of the our way or not at all attitude, which IMHO is the worst thing about a Mac. Call it arrogance if you will, but Apple seems to have aimed OSX at the n00b/ non-fiddler audience, and has forgotten that some users like to tweak things to thier preferences, even if it is only a simple option to change the colors or move something to a different location.

I have played with the beta of Shapeshifter, and again though, its not right, and some apps don't play ball with it.

The original hope was for pretty much Linux with a wider selection of apps, but this just isn't it.
After using a Linux/ Windows combo for the past 8 years, perhaps I'm a little limited in my outlook, but each to his own really.

-Leezer-
 
cyKey said:
Huh. I love the customization in OSX. You can change quite a lot that you can't in Windows. The reason why Shapeshifter has some issues is because its in beta. I can assure you that when its done it'll work fine. I use it on a PPC Mac Mini and its great.

Arrgh, I look like I'm about to start an argument here :p
A few small examples; Its the smaller little niggles that you see every day, rather than anything else-
First- The menu bar. There is no way by default to move it to the bottom of the screen. Windows & Linux let you position it where you want.
Second- Color scheme. Even if its simply the title bar of a window, in both Windows and Linux, its a few clicks work to change this, and there are alternate color schemes available by default. (Yes, Windows does need a hack for the more complex ones, but still ;) )
Third- Startup scripting/ apps. Again, this is much more of a pain in the rear to do on an OSX system.

My Shapeshifter issues were nothing to do with the beta ;) Most apps are designed to fit around the OSX interface, and therefore use unmodifiable theme elements (Without hacking in the app resources anyway) that fit in with it, rather than using either a neutral or customisable approach. This admittedly is because Apple have designed OSX to be used with a single GUI style, and users are not expected to have anything different by default, but still, my point remains :)

-Leezer-
 
OK, weighing back in here :)
I did float around several of the bigger Mac forums, and I've seen plenty of the things that people have put forward here, but the fact is that they're hacks, and most importantly they're not ideal for what I'm after ;)
The best example- Putting the apps folder on the dock is all very well, but this still has all the junk apps that you don't normally want in it. Yes, its possible to create a folder full of shortcuts/ symlinks and place this on the dock, but to access it, you still need right-click, otherwise it'll launch the folder instead. Right click is an utter pain in the backside; I strongly dislike the trackpad as it is, and the two-finger right-clicking doesn't really work well with the way I use the mouse. (I tend to have both hands on the keyboard, with a single thumb reaching back to use the mouse when I use a trackpad)

Keyboard- Oddly enough, I use an Apple keyboard with my Windows machine; I just find some elements of the layout easier to use. The Macbook keyboard is in no way bad, but those on Thinkpads are in a leauge of thier own.


I suppose a lot of this comes down to the way I've setup my previous Windows/ Linux setup over the past 9 years. I hope I'm not too biased though.

-Leezer-
 
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