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Why Panther May Tear Up Longhorn

Sophrosyne writes "Microsoft Watch has presented an article on Longhorn, which is due not before 2005, and compares it with Mac OS X 10.3 (Panther), which may be released this September. The article touches on some of the areas where Windows is ahead in operating system design and technologies, as well as how Panther plans to compete. Included in Microsoft Watch's article were links to a Extreme-Tech article on Desktop compositing, and 3D User Interfaces. It also contains videos of Longhorn's 3D Quartz-like user interface in action." If processor power is so important, why are we so willing to waste it on making windows do funny things when we move them around? Just wondering.

198 comments

  1. The biggest difference by Enrico+Pulatzo · · Score: 5, Funny

    between Longhorn's Windowing System and Quartz is IE will have it's css extended to allow you to do crap like that to arbitrary windows, so popup ads will be mesmerizing.

    the groundwork is in place already. It's only a matter of time before it's applied to the windows themselves.

    1. Re:The biggest difference by tha_mink · · Score: 1

      "neat"
      If you watch the videos with the sound on you can hear "This isn't the most practical thing but..."


      PS. "Hey! It's Enrico Pulatzo!"

      --
      You'll have that sometimes...
    2. Re:The biggest difference by klui · · Score: 1

      The second and third video short look more like bugs. Or like the other parent article, IE popups v2.

    3. Re:The biggest difference by torpor · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The second and third videos don't look like they're realtime to me... I imagine its just clipped video scaled, rotated, and alphamapped ...

      If she was hitting the "Start" key and the menu was being build and displayed, and all that, I would be a little happier with what I saw. But as it is, and knowing MS' track record of shoddy demo's, I'm gonna pass all judgement on Longhorn until I hear chimps talking about it on the bus.

      Until then, ho hum ...

      --
      ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    4. Re:The biggest difference by extrasolar · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You were moderated up as "Funny" but I fear you are not joking...

    5. Re:The biggest difference by stefaanh · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you watch the video's you find at the last page of ExtremeTech you see a huge difference in filesize between RealMedia, Windows Media File format, and QuickTime format. Gives the average visitor the impression that WMF has better compression ratio.
      What you don't see if you don't open all formats, is the higher quality of the QT version.
      Near fraud - or pseudo journalism.

      --
      --------
      * Sigh *
    6. Re:The biggest difference by Enrico+Pulatzo · · Score: 1

      I was being serious, looks like the last laugh will be on the longhorn users ;)

  2. ridiculous comparison by Tumbleweed · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Okay, Panther is due out RSN - and Longhorn is due in, what, TWO YEARS? I guarantee you, OS X will be much farther along by 2005, and the effect on OS X by the PowerPC 970 & succeeding processors (we'll have at _least_ the 980 and possibly 990 by 2005!) will be pretty astounding, if early, unconfirmed reports are even halfway accurate.

    Okay, now about making windows do silly things - I gotta agree here - the first thing I do after installation of any system is turn off all window animations & effects. I want that extra millisecond! :)

    I'm stuck temping on a weird laptop that keeps turning on window animation after every reboot - bizarre behavior. Plus it's Win98SE *sigh*. I haven't had to endure _that_ for quite some time. :(

    I like OS X, and plan to switch to a Mac when I can afford a PPC970 machine (hopefully this year), but I must admit that I could do without all the extra window chrome in OS X. I don't even like the extra window chrome in Win Me/2000/XP (I turn it off, but it's still there in some apps like Windows Media Player), but in OS X, it's extra pixel hungry. And that frickin' metallic theme that Apple puts on everything now (despite their design guidelines) - yuck! Brushed metal looks good on hardware, not on software.

    1. Re:ridiculous comparison by Mikey-San · · Score: 4, Informative

      What the /hell/ are you on?

      1. NO 970 MACHINE HAS BEEN ANNOUNCED BY APPLE YET. Say it with me, dammit. While it may be likely, don't take as canon rumor sites and IBM press releases that don't even mention Apple Power Macs. Jeez. You're already a Mac user, eh? (And I say that being one.)

      2. 980? 990? WTF? At what data are you looking? Search Google for "ibm 970 chip" and the only info you find are two random comments in some forum somewhere; search IBM for roadmap info on PowerPC, and you will find their "9xx" selection, and the only thing under that is this:

      http://www-3.ibm.com/chips/techlib/techlib.nsf/tec hdocs/A1387A29AC1C2AE087256C5200611780

      Lastly, with the release of the 970 being sometime in the second half of this year , don't you think saying we'll probably have a "990" by 2005 is a little premature?

      Meh.

      --
      Mikey-San
      Karma: +Eleventy billion (mostly affected by watching Celebrity Jeopardy)
    2. Re:ridiculous comparison by Captain+Nitpick · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Lastly, with the release of the 970 being sometime in the second half of this year , don't you think saying we'll probably have a "990" by 2005 is a little premature?

      Actually, this isn't that far-fetched. Look at all the chips that have been called "G4" by Apple.

      • 7400
      • 7410
      • 7450
      • 7451
      • 7455

      What is far-fetched is expecting a major redesign rather than minor incremental improvements.

      --
      But then again, I could be wrong.
    3. Re:ridiculous comparison by Mikey-San · · Score: 1

      But the original post obviously wasn't referring to tiny incremental changes (like the examples you posted), otherwise, he wouldn't have said to think about where the platform would be by 2005.

      --
      Mikey-San
      Karma: +Eleventy billion (mostly affected by watching Celebrity Jeopardy)
    4. Re:ridiculous comparison by Captain+Nitpick · · Score: 1
      But the original post obviously wasn't referring to tiny incremental changes (like the examples you posted), otherwise, he wouldn't have said to think about where the platform would be by 2005.

      Which is why I included the last sentence about expecting major changes being unreasonable.

      --
      But then again, I could be wrong.
    5. Re:ridiculous comparison by dbrutus · · Score: 1, Informative

      Speculation on a 980 is actually fairly realistic. The big brother of the 970 is the Power 4. The Power 5 is just starting to replace the Power 4 and it would be realistic to see a cut down desktop chip based on it coming out in the near future as well. This is supposed to be the 980. A 990 to follow on after that is mere hyperbole. They're just going to be ramping up the 980 during the 2005 timeframe.

    6. Re:ridiculous comparison by Thom+Khatt · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Just one of the favorite tactics from the big MS playbook. We've seen it time and time again. Good product is on the market. Microsoft promises something "Bigger and Better". People believe the FUD and wait to buy Microsoft product. Sales of original product drop off. Microsoft product finally comes out after months/years of delay and is inferior to original product. But people buy it because it's "Microsoft". "You can fool some all of the people some of the time, and you can fool some of the people all of the time, but you can always fool enough of the people enough of the time..."

    7. Re:ridiculous comparison by Mikey-San · · Score: 2, Informative

      This isn't informative, mods. It's /still/ speculation.

      The Power5 isn't "starting to replace the Power4", since it isn't going to be released until 2004. (See also here if you want more than once source on that.) 980 speculation is still that: speculation.

      --
      Mikey-San
      Karma: +Eleventy billion (mostly affected by watching Celebrity Jeopardy)
    8. Re:ridiculous comparison by gig · · Score: 1

      The brushed metal in OS X is drawn with OpenGL. It's a texture. In fact, the option that a developer selects to get the brushed metal look on their app is called "Textured Window".

      My point is that it's not drawn pixel by pixel but just sort of a wrapper around an object.

      Microsoft's eye candy is all kludged onto older stuff that was built without any forethought for the future. You have to turn it off to get back to what's practical for MS Windows.

      Quartz is not as snappy yet as plain-bitmap interfaces (at least on my 2 year-old Power Mac and 1 year-old PowerBook) but it is doing things right. A lot of the stuff that looks like eye candy in screenshots is "real" stuff being drawn by the graphics adapter. So a drop shadow is a real drop shadow on a 3D object, not a picture of a drop shadow that's placed in such a way as to appear like the proper item.

    9. Re:ridiculous comparison by gig · · Score: 1

      If you look at past history, Apple has used a new G4 every year, and a new G3 every year.

      The G4 in the original Power Mac G4 was a 7400, I believe. The G4 in the original PowerBook G4 was a 7410. There are also 7450's and a few others. The 7400 may have come only in 300, 400, 500 MHz, while the 7410 came in 500, 600, 700 MHz. The 7450 used less power than previous G4's and also had more Altivec units.

      So it's not out of the question to see 970's this year and see 980's or whatever follows next year.

      We're not talking about the 970 being the G5 and the 980 being the G6. The G5 moniker will cover the whole generation of chips, which in this case will be very much defined by 64-bitness. If it's a PowerPC desktop/notebook chip that's 64-bits, it will ship in G5 machines.

    10. Re:ridiculous comparison by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Actually, a PPC 980 is already planned, and it WILL be a fairly extensive workover compared to the PPC 970. While the 970 is a scaled-down version of the Power4 monster CPU, there is a Power5 set for release sometime in the next year. The PPC 980 (or 990, I forget which) will be a scaled down version of this new Power 5 CPU. Since the Power 5 is a MAJOR redesign of the Power 4, it would be logical to expect that the PPC 9x0 will be a "major" revision relative to the PPC 970.

      IBM is NOT Motorola, so comparisons to Motorola's CPU revision history are irrelevant. Mota can't even figure out how to fab regulary on a 130 nm process...and yet IBM is preparing a full transition to a 90 nm process for PPC 970s at the Fishkill fab. Different league, different sport altogether when comparing Moto's and IBM's ability to design and produce advanced CPUs.

    11. Re:ridiculous comparison by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      Interesting article and it essentially confirms what I was saying. The Power 5 will replace the Power 4 and the Power 5 will have members that go all up and down the entire IBM product line which will include something very much like a 980 whatever the marketing boys end up calling the thing. With Power 5 being released in 2004, a 980 release in 2005 is reasonable.

      In case you're wondering, I'm guessing the informative mod was about IBM's announced plans about the Power 5 and that's a legitimate mod. Power 5 is coming out and it's known around what time. The Power customers IBM has like to plan ahead, they like absolute predictability and reliability which is why they choose the chip in the first place. You can be reasonably sure that IBM will do everything it can to fulfill those expectations. There's a lot of money in that market and IBM doesn't want to disappoint.

    12. Re:ridiculous comparison by jericho4.0 · · Score: 1
      The great thing about Quartz (and I suppose Longhorn), is that all the eye-candy is offloaded onto the video card, which usually just sits there doing nothing with a traditional desktop.

      The first time I watched a semi-transparent DVD window minimize, and stay playing while minimizing and in the dock, I was, like, wow.

      --
      "A language that doesn't affect the way you think about programming, is not worth knowing" - Alan Perlis
    13. Re:ridiculous comparison by crashnbur · · Score: 1
      This tactic is not limited to Microsoft. Look at the Ford Mustang.

      And while you argue that Microsoft products have gotten worse, I disagree. Sure, there are better things out there, and Microsoft products may not be getting better at the same rate of improvement as some of the others, but Microsoft is a huge company with a lot on its plate, including lawsuits and other things (for instance, people like Slashdot's readership) trying to slow it down. There is no guarantee that Microsoft would be any better off without those hindrances, but there is certainly no guarantee that they wouldn't be.

      I say leave the giant be, and let the people buy what they want. If they aren't exposed to the better, more underground stuff, then (1) be proud that you are aware of it and (2) try to inform them, if that's your prerogative. But please, please, please --- don't get pissed off when your favorite, unknown item becomes mainstream. Don't preach its superiority if you don't want everyone to find it and like it more than the inferior, mass-marketed item.

    14. Re:ridiculous comparison by Thom+Khatt · · Score: 1

      Actually, I didn't say that Microsoft Products have gotten worse. They have indeed gotten better over the years. However, you are correct that it is definately not at the same rate as many of the other companies. And a lot of that is due to the innovation the other companies have. I really haven't seen much true innovation coming from Redmond. (The last truly "innovate" thing I've seen from MS? The "paperclip buddy"...) Granted, there are a lot of obstacles in Microsoft's way. But how many of them have been put there because of their own actions? The lawsuits are _not_ of the "I wrote 'Billie Jean' five months before Michael Jackson did" type. Most of them are _extremely_ credible. Which is why MS has been losing (or settling) a lot of them. I also disagree with "letting the giant be." The main way for anything to improve is criticism -- self-criticism, constructive criticism, even some of the flame wars have some value (although not much in the last...). But Microsoft would rather not hear _any_ of it. The arrogance which has come out of Redmond has been staggering. This is not to say that other companies (Apple especially) have not been arrogant. But we have seen many products come out of them which have been poorly copied. I will say that a lot of the anti-Microsoft sentiment I've seen is irrational "I hate Microsoft because its Microsoft" type. If you are going to hate something, have a good reason. For the record, I do use Microsoft. But I also use Linux, Macintoshes (Pre and post OS X) and even my little Commodore 64. My machine of choice is my G4 Mac Powerbook, which does have Virtual PC. Use what works. But I do want it to work.

    15. Re:ridiculous comparison by crashnbur · · Score: 1

      I use mostly Windows computers, but Macs come in handy for newspaper layout and such. The reason I prefer Windows, though, is that I feel like the interface is more intuitive and I have more power over how the system operates. That, and there's a lot more available software to do just about anything I can imagine. That is not to say Microsoft is better, but Windows can do more of what I want an operating system to do than Linux or Macs can -- and since the workplace standard is Windows, I'm better off using it.

  3. New viruses by Frac · · Score: 5, Funny

    Did anyone watch this clip of the new prototype GUI?

    This is it. This is what e-mail viruses are going to look like in four years.

    1. Re:New viruses by curious.corn · · Score: 1

      Whoa! How cool, next gen, never seen before! I'm reserving my copy now (nevermind it's probably a mockup)!
      Never mind it has already been done before... sorry folks, I can't find it in my history but a couple of days ago the developer announced Quake* GL supported on his framebuffer code here on /. Cool, everything truetyped and composited just to show off... now what IF linux devels didn't have to BEG for HW & SPECS... what IF HW companies developed production class code for linux (are they afraid it would put them in MS's contempt? *me grins*) and not on 2 years old HW... then we'll see competition... 'till then... my servers are 100% Linux and only fail when I'm bored enough to tinker with them ;-)

      edo

      --
      Mi domando chi à il mandante di tutte le cazzate che faccio - Altan
    2. Re:New viruses by odenshaw · · Score: 1

      did I seriously just sit and wait to watch that?

    3. Re:New viruses by big_a · · Score: 1

      That's horrible. How does that demo movie show anything even remotely useful. It's great to see the kind of crap that Microsoft is wasting their time creating.

      Is it just me, or did those windows look non-antialiased also?

  4. hrmpf by coyote4til7 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think the nickle summary is that Microsoft and Apple are madly hurrying to add stuff. They're not sure exactly what anyone is adding except they've heard there are rumors. Then they suggest you use google to go dig some unsubstantiated stuff up. Sheesh.

    --

    the clock on the wall says 4 til 7
    1. Re:hrmpf by ichimunki · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think the summary is more like "blah blah blah" (or is that "beep beep beep"). Like Apple has any chance in the next five years of unseating Microsoft-- no matter how great their OS is by comparison. And I think opening with Sorry, Linux desktop fans: When it comes to desktop operating systems, it's currently a two-way race between Windows and the Mac OS is the biggest indication that she's full of it. Linux doesn't lose on account of the UI itself... it loses for other reasons: the need to install it (really more about the learning curve than anything-- installing RH8 isn't any harder than installing Mac OS X) and the lack of "killer" apps (commercial or free).

      When it comes to the race, saying the race is between Apple and Microsoft is like saying you're going to have a freight hauling race between an go-cart and a semi. For whatever reason, Apple actually seems to have superior quality, but nobody's buying! Apple has been a niche player forever now. MS users aren't in a hurry for the next Windows. Most of them are just now barely getting into XP. No need for MS to try and rush anything or worry about Apple.

      --
      I do not have a signature
    2. Re:hrmpf by shaitand · · Score: 0, Interesting

      Sorry, Linux desktop fans: When it comes to desktop operating systems, it's currently a two-way race between Windows and the Mac OS

      The worst part of this is it's not true... linux desktop market share is overtaking Apples market hare by leaps and bounds... and with a bsd based mac I suspect it's not actually apple it's taking that market share from.

    3. Re:hrmpf by dbrutus · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Microsoft doesn't have to be formally unseated for the playing field on the desktop to radically change. If MS had a 80% share instead of a 90%+ share of the regular desktop market the other 20% would be a large enough market that *everybody would make multiplatform versions.

      Where the article goes wrong is that it presents the fight like it's one about UI or OS features. It isn't. It's about legal and financial issues. Linux, Mac OS and Windows are all capable enough to write a letter, surf the web, and do your accounting on which is the vast bulk of PC use to this day. MS is trapped by the market and its own business decisions to need to increase growth in order for those options not to stay underwater (thus invalidating their entire company compensation scheme). Their efforts to extract more money from existing customers, to break the informal contract they have kept for decades on casual piracy, and creating more and more restrictive EULA's will end up with their market share eroding. Apple will benefit from this as will Linux but Linux will be hampered by their reliance on the GPL which is and will remain the main focus of MS' FUD attack.

    4. Re:hrmpf by transient · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I keep reading this and I want to see some actual data. I Googled for linux market share the other day and didn't find anything substantial. Would you mind pointing me to some credible studies? (Not trying to be a smartass -- I really do want to see some data.)

      --

      irb(main):001:0>
  5. Fantastic, except by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Its not 3d!! If you look, all the windows are orientaed the same way, towards the screen. THey got useless crap, and stuff rotating around, and more of their damned processor eating animation, but thats it. All the other 3d interfaces ive seen have been just that, where you can put somehing off to the side and view the window at an angle, or turn your viewpoint around, so you leave something behind your head, essentially. THis is just more eye candy, that will fuck up my end users, and crash more often.

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
    1. Re:Fantastic, except by dhovis · · Score: 5, Informative

      It is 3d in the resect that the content of the windows are treated as textures which are mapped onto planes. That allows the compositing to be handled by the video chip instead of the CPU.

      Apple introduced this in Jaguar as "Quartz Extreme". Basically some of the CPU intensive stuff in the interface is offloaded into the 3D functions of the video chip. It requires a fairly hefty video chip (Radeon, or GeForce2+), but those are common now. The upside to it is that Quartz Extreme makes some of the flashier features (e.g. transparancy) available with no additional CPU cycles. It uses the video chip (which is largely untaxed anyway unless you are playing a game). In fact, on a Mac with QE, you can play a quicktime movie under a transparant terminal window with no slowdown and no increase in CPU use. You can use an OpenGL screensaver as your background with no significant CPU use.

      --

      --
      The internet is the greatest source of biased information in the history of mankind.

    2. Re:Fantastic, except by teridon · · Score: 2, Informative

      dhovis wrote: "You can use an OpenGL screensaver as your background with no significant CPU use"

      I have to disagree with you there -- on my 466 MHz G4 with a Radeon 8500, the Flurry screensaver running on the desktop takes up about 8% of the CPU, and the Window Manager process goes to 20-30%.

      Processes: 91 total, 2 running, 89 sleeping... 326 threads 22:25:34
      Load Avg: 2.44, 1.97, 1.75 CPU usage: 62.7% user, 21.3% sys, 16.0% idl
      SharedLibs: num = 70, resident = 22.5M code, 2.08M data, 6.78M LinkEdit
      MemRegions: num = 13696, resident = 263M + 24.8M private, 242M shared
      PhysMem: 96.3M wired, 454M active, 525M inactive, 1.05G used, 76.3M free
      VM: 7.34G + 43.8M 89098(0) pageins, 30217(0) pageouts

      PID COMMAND %CPU TIME #TH #PRTS #MREGS RPRVT RSHRD RSIZE VSIZE
      4052 Window Man 28.9% 88:27.41 3 495 1341 11.5M 102M 105M 287M
      8877 OSXvnc-ser 23.6% 0:15.00 5 72 124 1.65M 6.84M 10.4M 109M
      8894 top 14.1% 0:01.85 1 15 18 316K 380K 612K 13.6M
      8891 ScreenSave 8.2% 0:03.45 3 72 178 2.24M 15.1M 14.7M+ 125M
      [snip]

      seems pretty significant to me...

      --
      I hold it, that a little rebellion, now and then, is a good thing. -- Thomas Jefferson
    3. Re:Fantastic, except by sedna · · Score: 1

      Probably a dumb question, but are you actuall running Quartz Extreme? I thought that only the newest graphics cards had it, but I don't know if Radeon 8500 is one of those. Old cards, or cards with to little RAM, are supposed to downgrade to "normal quartz". When comparing a Cube with a 12" AlBook, the difference is quite remarcable...

    4. Re:Fantastic, except by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 1

      the Radeon 8500 certainly DOES support QE - as does his 466 G4 (which I think is an AGP 4x supporting model). My older 450dp with Radeon (AGP 2x only 32MB DDR) was the FIRST available Mac BTO hardware that supported QE - and it makes a HELL of a difference to window performance.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    5. Re:Fantastic, except by jcr · · Score: 1

      In the top readout you posted, the screensaver is getting that much CPU time because there's nothing else for the machine to do.

      Grab a window, and drag it around. Watch what *doesn't* happen to CPU utilization.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    6. Re:Fantastic, except by teridon · · Score: 1
      Oh, I see! So you are saying the screensaver just makes useless calculations for no apparent reason, is that it? And if I start doing something else, it won't try to do them anymore? I don't know where you get that idea!

      If there was "nothing else for the machine to do" then the CPU would be idle, not chugging away on updating the screen. If I had been doing something else, the screensaver (and window manager) would get a portion of the CPU time, just like any other calculation-hungry process.

      I'll admit that the CPU time doesn't increase much when moving a window around, but you can't tell me that the CPU time is not significant. I'd love to be able to run a screensaver on the desktop all the time -- but it just slows down the machine too much.

      --
      I hold it, that a little rebellion, now and then, is a good thing. -- Thomas Jefferson
    7. Re:Fantastic, except by jcr · · Score: 1

      Oh, I see! So you are saying the screensaver just makes useless calculations for no apparent reason, is that it?

      Umm, no. Try reading what I actually wrote again.

      I don't know where you get that idea!

      I didn't. You did.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    8. Re:Fantastic, except by Knife_Edge · · Score: 1

      PID COMMAND %CPU
      190 Window Man 11.4%
      538 ScreenSave 0.8%

      Hmmm, running the Flurry screensaver on the desktop of my 867mhz G4 powerbook (with the Nvdia Geforce 4MX 32MB GPU) reveals the above numbers as approximately the average (selected output from 'top -u'). The most significant change in the CPU usage comes from the window manager, which changes from neglible to about 10% when the saver starts.

      I think what people mean when they say things like this is that this CPU usage, while not always a low percentage, is both much lower than without Quartz Extreme (without which this number is about 3X greater), and moreover low enough that it does not interfere with most work. I run the screensaver engine with a considerably more CPU hungry saver nearly all the time, and the system is still as responsive as ever for everyday tasks. I turn it off for long code compiles and MP3 encoding, though.

      I think perhaps the issue in your case is that you must have a certain amount of graphics memory to be able to take advantage of Quartz Extreme, which really does help quite a bit on systems that can. Dunno...

  6. cause its not computed by the processor by paradesign · · Score: 0
    duh...

    its done with teh idle GPU, and is actually faster! esp on slower machines, like >500mhz G4s and G3s. all of the 'fluff' without the overhead, get a clue!

    --
    I want 2D games back.
  7. Self-correction by Mikey-San · · Score: 1

    Whoops! I hit preview and everything. Correction:

    "Search Google for ibm 970 chip' [...]"

    Should be:

    "Search Google for 'ibm 980 chip' [...]"

    --
    Mikey-San
    Karma: +Eleventy billion (mostly affected by watching Celebrity Jeopardy)
  8. Tearing up? by foooo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What do you mean Panther will tear up Longhorn? Apple to suddenly have 90% market share?

    Shiny spinny stuff is cool and all that, but windows doesn't have huge market share because of an amazing interface.

    It is because they arrived at market at the right time, with the right product, with the right marketing strategies. (Perhaps not morally right.. but the proof is in the pudding as far as $$ go)

    1. Re:Tearing up? by oscast · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "What do you mean Panther will tear up Longhorn? Apple to suddenly have 90% market share?"

      Tear up meaninging... that Apple will lengthen the gap with which its OS is better than Windows.

      "Shiny spinny stuff is cool and all that, but windows doesn't have huge market share because of an amazing interface."

      That's for sure.

      "It is because they arrived at market at the right time, with the right product, with the right marketing strategies.

      The vast majority of consumers don't CHOOSE windows... it is chosen for them as the result of illegal business practices which caused microsoft to dominate the industry...

      "(Perhaps not morally right.. but the proof is in the pudding as far as $$ go)"

      You bring up an interesting point... The best way to gauge user preference is to measure boxed OS sales... something Apple has consistently outpaced Microsoft by a large margin.

    2. Re:Tearing up? by foooo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My personal opinion is that user preference is best determined by number of seats installed.

      Boxed sales might be a meaningful measure if computers did not come with pre-installed OSs most of the time.

      No amount of rabid Apple fandom is going to show that Apple has had more success in the OS department financially speaking.

      We can debate quality of OS all night long, but the point of my original post was people vote with their dollars and what they're actually running on the desktop.

      Apple is an excellent niche product right now, but ignoring the fact that perpetuated market share is a *huge* reason why many choose MS products is simply naive.

      I should know better than to start a flamewar on apple.slashdot BUT the term "tearing up" IMHO would only be meaningful if Company X was going to dominate Company Y in actual market share and earnings.

      It would be completely beyond my expectations if Panther began to dominate XP (and then Longhorn) in market share, quality, and gross/net earnings especially given the time gap between the products.

      And yes, Caveat Emptor, I was on the XP development team... I like Windows and abandoned Macs somewhere around '91 for many reasons but mainly value for the dollar.

      ~foooo

    3. Re:Tearing up? by aristotle-dude · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The problem with that theory is... all pcs from major manufacturers come with wait for it.... windows. This makes it the most popular by default. Most people do not seem to bother trying to educate themselves about alternatives. If you look at UI features of Longhorn, they are borrowing heavily. I'm a mac user but I also have an XP machine at home and I'm a windows/.net developer at work. I'm glad to come home to a machine that has run without reinstalls or defrags since Oct 2002 when I bought my eMac.

      --
      Jesus was a compassionate social conservative who called individuals to sin no more.
    4. Re:Tearing up? by lpp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually, if the article was titled "Why Apple May Tear Up Microsoft", I would agree it would make sense to argue market share and earnings.

      But an article titled "Why Panther May Tear Up Longhorn", and referring to the technical merits of the two pieces of software, should really end being judged by the technical merits.

      But, as you said...your opinion...there's mine now...wheeeee...

      _lpp

    5. Re:Tearing up? by GlassHeart · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I like Windows and abandoned Macs somewhere around '91 for many reasons but mainly value for the dollar.

      This value comes at a price. You helped create a monoculture of operating systems, where interoperability is possible essentially only when Microsoft was late to the party, where a single virus outbreak may take down most of the world's connected desktops, and where one company decides where you want to go today.

      I like Apple, but I wouldn't want to see Apple with 95% of the market either. What I want is diversity, where several competing platforms capture various niches, none able to dominate the others.

      Funny you should mention value for the dollar. You do realize that Microsoft can probably sell Windows at $10 a copy and still make money, right?

    6. Re:Tearing up? by hype7 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I should know better than to start a flamewar on apple.slashdot BUT the term "tearing up" IMHO would only be meaningful if Company X was going to dominate Company Y in actual market share and earnings.


      The article referred to products, not Companies. Panther will tear up up Longhorn, not Apple will tear up Microsoft.

      If the article said that, then maybe market share and earnings would be relevant.

      A Porsche 911 Turbo will tear up a Honda Civic. Yet market share and earnings... Honda Civic wins. See what I mean?

      How good a product is does not necessarily translate to how many of the items is sold. You're thinking like a member of a development team, not an end user. Which isn't all that surprising, considering your disclaimer ;)

      -- james
    7. Re:Tearing up? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I'm not trying to flame you but..

      Your opinion about what tear it up means is your opinion, but when someone explains how they meant that terminology, your opinion about what it means is worth absolutely nothing in the context of your discussion with them, and possibly others on this page...

      We're not talking about Apple vs Microsoft. We're talking about Panther vs Longhorn. Microsoft will not be 'torn apart' by Apple (just yet). It's going to be a slow long trip. But all empires come to an end.

      I disagree with you about the perpetuated market share bit. I'd say for many many people, their jobs dominate what OS they choose to work with at home. If they are going to have to use a Windows PC at work, there's a good chance they will want to use one at home. Applications, internal company software, compatibility. You also have to remember that many people do not have the level of experience you do with a computer. They don't want to know how to use two or three operating systems. Computers do not interest them. They don't care. They just want to get what they need done.

      Now that they have a PC in their home, their children will probably use that computer. As a result those children may be more comfortable using Windows, as opposed to another system, regardless of any advantages it might have.

      This is what people mean by 'perpetuated market'. The second you use any os, you invest in it. Wether it's through experience, software, or time.

      I've never met a *real* person who had a personal reason to use Windows over another operating system. It always comes down to: 'They are used in my place of work' or 'I don't have anything better to but play videogames, so I use windows'.

      I've never met anyone who had an actual cut on Mac OS X vs Windows. They consistently talk about the processor power and how 'macs are slower' even though they haven't used one since '91 like yourself.

      User preference is best calculated by removing external factors like platform specific software and file/protocol compatibility, then find someone who has never used a computer before, give them Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X, and see which one they would like to use.

      I like Mac OS X and I abandon windows everyday.

    8. Re:Tearing up? by gig · · Score: 2, Informative

      You are supposed to think of an actual panther (the big animal) fighting with a longhorn bull or whatever a longhorn is. Both codenames are animals.

      The reason these features are important is that application developers build on them. I plugged a new printer into our AirPort base station today and it just appeared in the printer lists on all of our Macs with no configuration, thanks to Rendezvous (ZeroConf networking). Also, our TiVo looks on the network for iTunes music and iPhoto albums and shows them on the TV. The music and photos can be on any Mac and they just show up on the TiVo automatically.

      Until MS Windows has Rendezvous, MS Windows users are going to have to configure that stuff for themselves. Apps are going to be stupider on Windows just because Windows is missing that one feature.

      So if Mac OS is so far ahead of Windows right now, and Panther is coming late 2003, while Longhorn is 2005, then what kind of apps will we be running on the Mac until 2005? What improvements are making our lives easier and our work better and faster between now and 2005?

      The tearing up is what Mac users are doing to Windows users right now and will do at a faster pace from now on. My Macs have all crashed once in the past two years. That kind of stuff is a huge advantage and as the gap gets wider the advantage grows.

      Also, all pro Mac hardware for the past few years has shipped with Gigabit Ethernet, and all Macs since 1999 have AirPort (Wi-Fi). There is a lot of hardware out there for new versions of Mac OS to do interesting things with that Windows really can't expect to find in every machine. Making DVD's is old, old news on the Mac. Kids make DVD Video discs on iMacs and it's easy and the results are great.

    9. Re:Tearing up? by gig · · Score: 1

      Apple is all about value. Macs are easier to use, do more out of the box, cost less to own, and the whole is greater than the sum of its parts because somebody actually designed what features your computer has as a complete system.

      So when I hooked my PowerBook up to my Power Mac I benefited from the fact that they both have Gigabit Ethernet, even though I may not have known that I would want that later (I typically move about 20GB of data between the two once or twice a week). You can also hook two Macs up with FireWire and they just network themselves. These features are worth paying for.

      Not to mention iLife, which exploits your DVD drive and FireWire ports and Wi-Fi and all the other new stuff that's in computers now.

      You have to add so much stuff to a Dell to make it a shadow of a Mac ... Dells are cheap but not valuable.

    10. Re:Tearing up? by foooo · · Score: 1

      User preference is best calculated by removing external factors like platform specific software and file/protocol compatibility, then find someone who has never used a computer before, give them Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X, and see which one they would like to use.

      I don't use operating systems in a vacuum and don't expect that others do. Things like platform specific software and file/protocol compatibility are features, it is a feature that I can play the latest games right when they come out, that all my friends use it, that I use it at work... etc...

      Also, I have used OS X, albeit not very much, but I didn't dig it enough to switch... Perhaps it just didn't like me. I do like the way Windows works. When I originally read the headline... I just didn't see Panther tearing up Longhorn, especially given that Longhorn will be released quite some time after Panther. Perhaps I'm just a wierdo, waiting until the OSs are released to compare them in a meaningful way....


      PS. I never knew it would be this much fun to flame an I love Apple thread.

      ~foooo

  9. Hum... by zbowling · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Yet another way windows can useless tax the entire systems resources. It seems as computers get faster, windows gets more uselessly taxing. We never get to experience something new in how fast windows load and apear because windows adds so much to take advantage of everything we have.

    I was a UNIX head 10 years ago, then I was a mac head about 7 years ago, and finnaly I moved to windows when windows 3.1 came out. Now I am going back to UNIX/Linux/Mac. I would like to redefine windows use as a proff of concept platform. When a new tech comes out it seems like it only works for windows for a while, then it moves to Mac and later UNIX/Linux. Windows is so restrictive and not very powerful. It forces me to things their way and conform my system to them and their products and technologies. Unfortunatly they have a software and hardware dominace in the market place. I think thats what they call a monopoly. Well I hope this will change with the new release of the Mac OS. The new MacOS already does things that Microsoft says it will include or be able to do later. Maybe this will end the monopoly that they hold if more companies switch. Go Apple!

    --
    No.
    1. Re:Hum... by MaxwellStreet · · Score: 1, Informative

      7 years ago was... 1996? I'd imagine that Windows 3.1 was old news by then.

      I mean... there's a reason they called it Windows 95 - and there were releases delayed much earlier than that (back when it was called "Chicago").

      And the new tech coming out on Windows first? I believe the Mac was the first with a widely commercially used windowing GUI.

      Oh, and Apple won't break the MS monopoly, no matter what eye-candy they come up with. Linux/BSD will - because it's free, looks good enough, and it gets the job done.

    2. Re:Hum... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Oh, and Apple won't break the MS monopoly, no matter what eye-candy they come up with."

      This comment makes it sound as if the only thing OS X contributes as far as a better OS using experience is concerned is "eye candy".

      OS X does look better than XP, but its also more functional too...

    3. Re:Hum... by mrpuffypants · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Nope, sorry, it won't

      Linux nerds need to pull their heads out of their asses and simply realize that Linux needs to be retardedly easy to use! I don't care how many things it can do, If a user wants a new program they shouldn't have to worry about if they have KDE, GNOME, or some other system, let alone how it functions on their particular distro.

      That's why Windows is better and will stick with their dominance. It works, so why switch? A windows box is a windows box is a windows box. It's easy to see that something will generally work because windows is basically the same across the board.

      The entire Linux community has this Matrix-like mentality they they are the only ones who see a way out and they it is their duty to convert everybody else away from using the systems that they are already comfortable with. What if they already like Windows? Why should they switch at all if the only change is kernel recompilations and shaky compatibility.

      Result: Windows will live long on the Desktop. Apple will keep innovating and stay the "luxury car" of computers. BSD/Linux will kick ass in servers. fin.

    4. Re:Hum... by jpsowin · · Score: 2, Funny

      Then when Apple becomes a monopoly, we will all switch to Windows 2015PROXP+ becuase we want to kill the big mean Apple monopoly!

    5. Re:Hum... by MaxwellStreet · · Score: 1

      Listen, mr. puffypants...

      (sorry, I couldn't resist)

      I wasn't arguing that MS was going to lose in the Desktop space - they'll be there forever. I mean hell, there are people out there still using VMS!

      My point was that Linux/BSD apps, properly administered, will provide excellent functionality for business users in controlled environments - and would break the MS monopoly there.

      Nothing is going to eradicate Windows anytime soon. We're in agreement there.

    6. Re:Hum... by shaitand · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Security, stability, REAL COMPATIBILITY, speed, and the people who write the software taking the time to do it right and still developing faster than microsoft.

      Microsoft is compatable with microsoft, *nix popular OSS implements protocols, api's, and software that generally runs on everything an it's dog. Linux itself runs on virtually every computer made in the last 20yrs, it runs on all modern console gaming systems, it's been ported to the ipod and numerous other systems, it runs on propriety POS systems, IBM mainframes, sparcs, pc/mac (yes, it's what darwin was fabled to be long before it actually came out and apple fans pretended it wasn't supposed to be the bridge between pc and mac hardware), it's a perfectly embeddable system, it's production run and time tested.

      Keep in mind that since it's release linux has been one ongoing piece of software that has evolved and become more stable. Windows has been rewritten with a brand new set of poorly debugged implementations repeatedly. Do you know a windows tech (who can named the required files to make every windows OS version boot of the top of his head) who would consider using a new version of windows before it's been out SIX MONTHS.

      Advanced OSS users are often willing to use CVS versions of software because it's more stable than the competing commercial software, especially windows.

      You admit that linux kicks ass in servers... but do you realise that OSS developers really haven't been seriously targetting the desktop until very recently? How does linux compare with dos 4 in the ease of use department? It took microsoft longer to get to dos 4 than it took to get the server stable (and more stable every day) linux to the desktop ease of use it's at now... without losing a step on the side I might add.

      Open source developement will win... it won't simply win, it might take longer than some think because microsoft is entrenched, but remember, microsoft has to keep making money... open source doesn't to survive, open source gets 100,000's of thousands of hours of free labor, that's what it takes to compete with a financial giant so big it squashes every competitor before it can compete. Open source can lose the battle now and it will come back to haunt microsoft in 10yrs... by it's nature it can't die.

      Some are trying to liberate but for most it's really a very selfish persuit, I don't care to use that POS OS that would lock me into the will of the commercial giants... I don't want to use a system that is technically inferior and not user intuitive. I don't want to use a system that is guided entirely by economic sense rather what people want. That is quite selfish, it's just rather convient that when most people hear the benefits and downfalls of both, they want to switch (or never use M$ in the first place). For some it's not viable because propriety apps lock them in place... but they want to switch and that is all that matters. The only ones I hear say they don't want to switch are technicians who are afraid of unlearning most of what they know or a change that huge, or simply don't want their investment in proprietary technology to turn out a waste. For them I say... be a fucking technician/programmer, it's your job to learn the technology on both sides and choose the superior solution because all those masses of idiots out there run what WE tell them to or install for them!

    7. Re:Hum... by Toraz+Chryx · · Score: 3, Informative

      "Don't forget Microsoft OWNS a rather big hunk of apple"

      They don't anymore, and $150 million worth of shares in a company that has $4 billion in the bank isn't really a "big hunk" of the company anyway.

    8. Re:Hum... by Scarblac · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Linux nerds need to pull their heads out of their asses and simply realize that Linux needs to be retardedly easy to use!

      Only if your goal is to have everybody and their mothers use it.

      What I want, on the other hand, is something totally different - I want power. And I don't care about world domination. I love Linux the way it's now. I think I'm not the only Linux nerd who thinks that way. Retardedly easy to use is for retards. They can use Windows or whatever, I don't care.

      --
      I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
    9. Re:Hum... by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      MS sold those shares during the dotcom bubble when Apple was at $100-$150.

    10. Re:Hum... by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      Actually, Apple has made it really, really easy to shift to FreeBSD or Darwin if they get out of line. Technologically, they've made themselves vulnerable to such a switch so if Apple ever does get mean, running Darwin/GNUStep on the same hardware and then shifting to FreeBSD/GNUStep on your next hardware purchase means you have a very easy technology route out of Apple slavery. Apple knows this, of course, which is why they did it. Their business pitches sometimes include this explicitly.

      Now GNUSTep isn't going to be resynced with Cocoa API inside of 4-5 years but do you really think that apple will become a big bad monopoly within that time frame? I don't.

    11. Re:Hum... by cyman777 · · Score: 1

      Grrr - just try some major distribution like SuSE, install _everything_ in 30 mins ("Standard System") including Office and whatever. plug in Digicam - works plug in Scanner - works plug in WLAN PCMCIA card - works Visit site offering rpms and install _from within_ the browser (konqueror) (did that to update Mozilla). Give it to computer beginner and you will receive the _same_ questions you would have been asked giving Windows to them. But now viruses, updates from your home via shell. What else do you want?? A user who does more in Windows than mail will be able to point his browser to rpm archive pages and install software in Konqueror. Why do I know? Because everything mentioned above happened when I switched my parents to Linux. You mentioned easy of use and not availability of software. That is another story of course.

    12. Re:Hum... by gig · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yeah, stop with the "eye candy". Just because you've only seen OS X in screenshots doesn't mean that its features stop there.

      It's more about what's under the skin ... the stuff that the regular user doesn't interact with except that it works.

      FireWire is always there and always works. Bluetooth is fully-functional. Wi-Fi(g) is done and I'm sending this over a g network now. Rendezvous is zero-configuration networking ... our network here just configured itself, including the printer that's on the base station appearing on all the Macs, and music and photos that are shared show up for browsing on all the other Macs and also our TiVo. Mac OS X doesn't crash. It moves between networks transparently, even between Ethernet and Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. The whole GUI and many apps are scriptable. The file system is Unicode and can hold $ and ? and * in filenames. Searching for something takes milliseconds, and you can fsck a 120GB disk in 10 seconds. You can turn any folder into a virtual disk file, with optional AES-128 encryption. There is a complete 32-bit audio subsystem and full MIDI routing. Consumer-level movie editing and DVD creation is built-in. I could go on and on and on.

      The eye candy is the least of it. Bill Gates complained at WinHEC that Windows apps look like crap and asked developers to take advantage of the 3D video cards that are only used for gaming on the PC. On the Mac, our video cards work just as hard as every other part of the complete system, and things that look like eye candy come with no performance penalty. Steve Jobs says something like, "we've got a 64MB NVIDIA card in there that can do amazing things with OpenGL, so why not use it?"

      Also, all Macs are dual display and have TV out. These features really work for you when you have them all there at once and they are easy to use and work every time.

      Developers are exploiting this stuff in new ways and users are loving it. You are missing out on so much if you haven't at least given a Mac a test drive at an Apple Store.

    13. Re:Hum... by gig · · Score: 1

      There used to be a product called "Yellow Box for Windows NT" which was basically the Mac's Cocoa API on Windows. There's no reason why the Cocoa API can't also run on Linux or whatever system Apple wants to release it for.

      I would love to see IBM do a "PC 2.0" with Linux and Cocoa for Linux and a bunch of Lotus software. Sell them 10 at a time as basic business desktops and when one fails you swap in another and the user just logs in and doesn't care that they just got a whole new system.

      Microsoft is so burdened with their own crappy software and short-sighted design mistakes or complete lack of design. There is a Microsoft bubble that will burst at some point soon when CTO's and such finally see how much work they don't have to do if they get rid of Windows.

      Talk to anyone who switched from Windows to Mac OS X in the past year or so and they are the most rabid Mac fanatics because all this crappy stuff just dropped away when they ditched MS Windows, like re-installs and viruses and incompatibilities. Now they boot from FireWire, don't ever have to enter network settings, and the stuff just runs and runs and runs without quitting.

    14. Re:Hum... by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      You're not quite getting it. GNUStep is an OSS project with no connections to Apple. Think of it as WINE for Mac OS X. Not that the two projects are strictly related from a computing standpoint but for the end user they do similar things in theory, let you run software on an OS that the software was not written for. Unfortunately GNUStep is very much out of step right now but they're working on it. In 4-5 years, they may even have their act together enough that any Apple thoughts towards reverting to their bad ways (and they have had those instincts from time to time) will laregly be tempered by the happy warriors who keep GNUStep in sync with Cocoa and let cheapskates run Mac OS X Cocoa software without actually needing to purchase a mac.

  10. its all about revenue. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    microsoft single largest source of revenue is licenses bundled with the sale of new PCs. If they release something new that runs just great on existing old computers they lose *tons* of revenue. All MS operating system and software updates will require new computers for that reason.

    1. Re:its all about revenue. by shaitand · · Score: 1

      This is why linux will win out, it doesn't have the revenue constraints, it just keeps going without concerns over turbulance of the market. OSS developers can implement features because they want them, they don't need to worry about whether or not anyone will pay for them, those feature they leave to business developers who also *gasp* are often OSS developers working on the same projects, so the features people want are implemented, whether people want them enough to pay for them (or can afford to) or not.

    2. Re:its all about revenue. by Game+Genie · · Score: 1

      If microsoft developed sw that worked w/ older computers they would see a major hit in sales of new computers, but as long as they continued making new versions incompatible with old versions, they would still force the sales of just as many sw units.

  11. Making windows media player less ugly by Tom7 · · Score: 3, Informative

    On windows xp, reassociate movie files with "mplayer2.exe" (comes with the OS), and you can have back the stable old simple interface movie player from Windows 2000.

    1. Re:Making windows media player less ugly by den_erpel · · Score: 1

      actually,

      reassociate with mplayer.exe (that you download from http://www2.mplayerhq.hu/MPlayer/releases/win32-be ta/) and you should be released from all the codec problems you experience (most of all, you windows users will stop bugging us *n*x users about this).

      --
      Genius doesn't work on an assembly line basis. You can't simply say, "Today I will be brilliant."
  12. 3d gui bad by Apreche · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Okay, 3d is a neat thing. It's really neat because it creates entire new genres of video games. And it also make really cool animation for movies and such possible. However, for user interfaces 3d is bad unless it's a hologram, and we're still talking flat monitors here. It's one thing if you use the 3d stuff to make it look cool. Say an icon is a spinning 3d image of a disk instead of a pixellated icon of a disk. That would indeed be cool, if useless. However, making the actual interfact 3d is bad. 3d implies depth which means something is behind something else. Behind is bad in UI, because it's obscured.

    What I would like to see is a vector graphics based user interface. Right now my task bar I have to set the width in pixels. I have to select one of 4 sides of the screen to put it on. All of my windows are rectangular in shape. With a GUI based on vectors I could have a round web browser. Or an oblong winamp. My task bar could be a triangle in the lop left of my screen. I could change the shape of existing windows to make room for new ones. Usually if I've got 3 or 4 windows open on a desktop all the room is used, but a small piece is left over, or one of the windows has to be sized awkwardly to fit. The awkwardly sized window ends up having it's internal ui elements messed up. With a vector based ui you could morph each window to maximize use of screen space.

    Microsoft is using 3d because they can. They are thinking about keeping a hold on their 3 year upgrade cycle. Apple, while not making a vector based ui, is thinking about making a good ui.

    --
    The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
    1. Re:3d gui bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Efficiency... 3D is great and all, but for the average user, I believe it's going to be a headache. There's a REASON everything's rectangular: your monitor displays a rectangular picture and rectangles tesselate nicely! Until we have nifty displays a-la Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, having a 3D user interface is useless. There is an exception to this however. A 3d interface used for manipulating objects in a 3d space (mainly in 3d modelers and games) is a Good Thing and makes user experience a little easier to swallow.

    2. Re:3d gui bad by argel · · Score: 1

      FWIW, BeOS had plans to implement the entire GUI via OpenGL. To the user it would have still been a 2D interface, but under the hood it would have been OpenGL. Too bad Be went bye bye.

      --

      -- Argel
    3. Re:3d gui bad by Have+Blue · · Score: 3, Informative

      Quartz is vector-based. It has a built-in path rasterizer and support for floating-point coordinates (among other things). It can also do nonrectangular windows (and change their shape on the fly), but no one really takes advantage of this outside Apple's sample code.

    4. Re:3d gui bad by nathanh · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Okay, 3d is a neat thing. It's really neat because it creates entire new genres of video games. And it also make really cool animation for movies and such possible. However, for user interfaces 3d is bad unless it's a hologram, and we're still talking flat monitors here.

      No, I disagree. I know it's the conventional wisdom to say "3D GUIs aren't practical" but I'd like to think that reality isn't constrained by our collective imaginations. Just because you're unable to conceive of a practical 3D GUI doesn't mean one doesn't exist. To be fair, I can't imagine what would work either. But before 1962 there was a similar amount of uncertainty about 2D interfaces.

      If I was to extend my imagination - something I'm not very good at - I would like to see a feature where I can "spin" my point of view to see windows that are virtually sitting to my left or behind me. I think that'd be far more useful than multiple virtual desktops; the ON-OFF nature of virtual desktops is painful and it means you need "Move to Desktop 3" buttons, and sticky pushpins, and other stupid concepts. I would prefer a single 3D space that was essentially a large virtual desktop where you only see the windows directly in "front" of you.

      If you don't like that idea then don't bother pointing out the flaws. The poor example I've given isn't the point. The point is that there are benefits to a 3D desktop that you and I can't begin to imagine. It's easy to say "that'll never work". It's harder to actually invent something new. This is what distinguishes an inventor (dare I say... an innovator) from the boring masses of cynics.

    5. Re:3d gui bad by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      However, for user interfaces 3d is bad unless it's a hologram

      Let me give you an example.

      First, imagine your current desktop as having depth. Each window is a different distance from you, and windows that are "nearer" to you can obscure windows that are "farther". If you are constrained to looking at your stack of windows from one direction (the front), then visually that's what you have today.

      One limitation of this is that you cannot really have too many windows. Windows in the "back" can be hard to get to, and bringing them "in front" can obscure other things you want. In other words, we have a space management problem, and the granularity is the window.

      Now, imagine if you rotated that view 90 degrees to the left or right, and assume that your windows are one pixel "thick". You'd expect to see a number of vertical lines, each representing a window. This view is pretty useless, because you'll have a hard time figuring out which window is which. However, it does sudden show all of your windows.

      Where does 3-D come in? It lets you rotate your desktop at any angle between 0 (in front) and 90 degrees to the left or right. This allows you to take peeks behind the top windows, without actually bringing the rear windows forward. To improve the effect, "near" windows can become more transparent as the viewing angle increases, showing more of what's behind.

      How do you control that? Very easily. If you have a multi-button mouse, you can hold down one special button and move the mouse in any direction to rotate the desktop in that direction. Let go of the mouse button, and the display snaps back to the "in front" view.

      It's not going to change the world, obviously, but I think this may enable people to effectively use more windows than before.

    6. Re:3d gui bad by shaitand · · Score: 1

      Why not combine the two? Why not 3d vector graphics? This is possible using 3d postscript for display behind the scene. The best thing about this angle is that some day in the future when physical displays sitting on the desk are a thing of the past is that it will be an easier transition programming wise on many levels.

    7. Re:3d gui bad by shaitand · · Score: 1

      what good is this on an OS that can't handle opening as many windows as I can manage with a 2d interface? What good is it for anyone who actually closes windows they aren't using? Seriously, I've never known anyone who actually needed more than 8-12 windows at a time and those are power users... they can all manage to switch between them without any issues. This again is a wasted resource.

    8. Re:3d gui bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is possible using 3d postscript for display behind the scene.

      That's almost exactly what Apple's Quartz is. An evolution (using PDF), of NeXT's Display PostScript.

      Of course, this is neither vector or 3D, reason being that dispite looking cool, both of those are horrible ideas for usable interfaces. Vector is too unpredictable to design for, and 3D is just utterly unusable.

    9. Re:3d gui bad by GlassHeart · · Score: 1
      what good is this on an OS that can't handle opening as many windows as I can manage with a 2d interface?

      Did you actually read my post?

      The OS is not the problem. It can handle many more windows than any person can. It's the 2-D desktop metaphor that's limiting us today.

      What good is it for anyone who actually closes windows they aren't using?

      Why should you have to close it? You're so conditioned to the way you work that you can't "zoom out" and consider that there may be other ways to get things done.

      You may know of people who appear messy, because they have stacks of papers all over their desk. However, some of these people can easily find what they need, despite the apparent mess. These people are able to remember chronologically and spatially where their documents are. A 3-D desktop like I mentioned may actually find a document faster than the traditional nested folders option.

      Seriously, I've never known anyone who actually needed more than 8-12 windows at a time and those are power users

      Has it ever occurred to you that maybe it's not that they couldn't use more open windows so much as they can't handle so many open ones, under the current metaphor of the 2-D desktop?

      If you observe a user of Apple ][ in 1982 or so, you'll notice that even power users only used one task. If you concluded that even power users only need one task, you'd be wrong. How about circa Windows 3.1? People had multiple windows, but you couldn't really have all that many open, because screen resolutions were poor.

      This again is a wasted resource.

      Try to be open minded. Have you ever even used a 3-D desktop like I described? Besides, if you paid attention, you'd realize that almost all of the work is done by my very idle 3-D GPU.

    10. Re:3d gui bad by faedle · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, there is one major piece of software that takes full advantage of Quartz. They even advertize both in their product packaging and in the video they include with the 30-day free trial all the neat things you can do because their software is Quartz-enabled.

      That would be Microsoft Office.

    11. Re:3d gui bad by alonsoac · · Score: 2, Informative

      Windows can do nonrectangular windows since many years ago, but I have seen few applications and even fewer tat actually looked good/worked well.

    12. Re:3d gui bad by Have+Blue · · Score: 0

      So could OS 9 with a bit of work.

    13. Re:3d gui bad by King+of+the+World · · Score: 1
      Vector is unpredictable? In that case bitmap is unpredictable too - just change your resolution and the button that was readable is now tiny and in a different place on the screen!

      A good toolkit can make vector interfaces predictable, and like font hinting a toolkit could slightly alter the vector shape when rasterising to low resolutions. The programmer never need deal with such issues, but the point is that vectors aren't inherently unusable - a toolkit can deal with all the issues surrounding vector graphics (just like the bitmap graphics libraries do).

      One thing I like about Gnome is that the default size is quite large (I'm guessing, but they're obviously not 16x16 or 32x32, they look like the icons start at 64x64 or something like that). Windows (all versions) is still getting smaller each year as people (on average) increase their resolution. OS9 was getting tiny and difficult to see. OSX is better.

      Back in 1985 with 320x200/640x480 resolution we had icons that were 16x16. On a 14inch (35cms) screen at 320x200 that would be about 0.7inches (1.7cms) square (I know this is fuzzy math, that screens aren't square and that the viewable size of a screen would less than 14 inches, but you get the idea). Now it's not uncommon to find trays of buttons 0.3inches (1cm) and smaller on screens.

      These problems are because of bitmaps, and I don't see any inherent problems in vectors that toolkits can't address.

      People need to get out of the idea that increasing screen resolution makes things smaller - desktops should be like any 3D game in the last 10 years where increasing your resolution just adds to the detail.

      I agree that 3D is usuable, though mostly because most interfaces need 2D text.

    14. Re:3d gui bad by gig · · Score: 1

      Non rectangular windows are done right in Mac OS X. Since the image you see on the display is composited in real-time, when an app shows a round window (or any shape), what's behind the app shows through because it really is behind. You don't have to do any tricks.

      Audion is one Mac app that has had funky windows forever. On Mac OS X it is just way easier for the developer because the system takes care of compositing your app with other apps that are open.

      Also, there were many themes for the old Mac OS that used weird window shapes.

    15. Re:3d gui bad by gig · · Score: 1

      Mac OS X is 3D. The frontmost app's windows are closer to you than all the other windows. All the background windows are stacked on each other and everything casts a shadow of the right depth.

      The key is that it's not a trick. It's not a mock up made by an artist in Photoshop, or a black line drawn along the bottom and right side of a window as a faux-shadow. The interface is drawn using OpenGL and the huge NVIDIA or ATI graphics processor in every Mac. The shadows and textures are done in real-time.

      It's not 3D like zooming around in a video game; it's 3D like a trophy case. It's tall and wide and deep and it has objects in it. It's not infinitely deep; it's only a few inches deep. So your display may be 14" wide and 10" tall and 3" deep. You end up thinking of your desktop as a glass box. If you could reach in you would expect your hand to find the Dock right up against the glass, and the desktop a ways back from that.

      Look at a Mac OS X display carefully and you'll see that the desktop itself is way behind everything else (note the huge shadow that the menubar casts on the desktop). The windows on the display are shuffled up and down between the desktop and the glass of the display.

    16. Re:3d gui bad by nathanh · · Score: 1
      Mac OS X is 3D. The frontmost app's windows are closer to you than all the other windows. All the background windows are stacked on each other and everything casts a shadow of the right depth.

      I think you've misunderstood. We were talking about 3D GUIs, not 3D effects on a 2D "desktop metaphor" GUI. The Aqua interface is still based on the concept of overlapping windows on a flat desktop. It's not "3D like a trophy case". It's simply 2D with some 3D-looking enhancements. The fact that Aqua uses 3D hardware to achieve those fancy effects is irrelevant.

      And yes, I know how Aqua achieves some of its effects. You might be aware that there are hacked versions of XFree86 that do something similar; all windows are rendered to texture memory and composited on-the-fly using the 3D hardware. Using one of those hacked XFree86 servers wouldn't transform KDE into a 3D GUI. Do you agree?

    17. Re:3d gui bad by drunkenbatman · · Score: 2, Informative

      Mac OS X is 3D.

      No it's not. If it was 3D I could move my orientation around 3 axis, as in Quake. Doom wasn't 3D, even though it could give the impression of depth.

      The frontmost app's windows are closer to you than all the other windows. All the background windows are stacked on each other and everything casts a shadow of the right depth.

      The front-most window has a slightly deeper shadow, true. But I'm just having a really hard time believing that all OS's have been needing are drop shadows in place of thicker bars.

      The key is that it's not a trick.

      Of course it is. That's like saying anti-aliased text isn't tricking your mind into thinking the text is smooth, or that TV's updating faster than your eye can see aren't tricking it. Just about everything you see on a computer is using tricks to give an impression. If you can honestly tell me that the drop shadow under the menu bar isn't there to give an illusion of depth just as a drop shadow on my company's logo on my webpage isn't made to do the same thing, then well you have bigger fish to fry. I mean you don't think iTunes is really made out of metal, do you? Or that when you minimize a window, that the genie effect is a real 3D window being transformed?

      It's not a mock up made by an artist in Photoshop, or a black line drawn along the bottom and right side of a window as a faux-shadow.

      Que? I can't imagine anyone thinking that all the screenshots they've seen of OSX are photoshop mockups... As for the drop-shadow versus the thicker bar to denote some depth... the drop shadow is of course going to be more natural at conveying it, but it doesn't mean it will be always be as successful. A good case can be made against OSX that without those window bars (and just the drop shadows) the UI has a tendancy to "blur together" rather than have distinctive windows.

      The interface is drawn using OpenGL and the huge NVIDIA or ATI graphics processor in every Mac.

      *shakes head* No it's not. The interface is drawn by the window manager, and then it hands the views to the hardware (if it is AGP2x, and has 16megs of video ram... this covers current mac models but not even the original 500MHz and 550MHz tiBooks and iBooks) and the hardware then composites those views together. Those drop-shadows you're so hot on are drawn in software, but with QE hardware is able to composite that drop shadow over the other views. When you minimize a window with the genie-effect, the window manager has to calculate how each frame of the animation will look, and then has to generate that view- QE just slaps that overtop the other windows saving CPU time.

      Understand that you are not seeing an OS being generated in 3D but presented in a 2D metaphor- you're seeing openGL composite 2D windows as views. That's it.

      The shadows and textures are done in real-time.

      Wait a minute... so the crutch is that in order for windows to have a "3D interface" and all the goodness you think it entails, it has to have shadows around the windows that are generated in real-time? Look here... Drop-shadowy alpha-blended windows goodness. The only difference between it and OSX is that OSX is able to offload the compositing of its shadows to the GPU.

      It's not 3D like zooming around in a video game; it's 3D like a trophy case.

      Kinda like, "He's not deaf, she just can't hear"? One nonsensical statement deserves another...

      It's tall and wide and deep and it has objects in it. It's not infinitely deep; it's only a few inches deep. So your display may be 14" wide and 10" tall and 3" deep. You end up thinking of your desktop as a glass box. If you could reach in you would expect your hand to find the Dock right up against the glass, and the desktop a ways back from that.

      Um, perhaps if there were more variations in the sizes of the drop shadows... but I'm not seeing

    18. Re:3d gui bad by 11223 · · Score: 1

      Go download iPulse from the Iconfactory. It uses a totally vector-based and non-rectangular UI. It's quite pretty, too.

    19. Re:3d gui bad by shaitand · · Score: 1

      "Did you actually read my post?

      The OS is not the problem. It can handle many more windows than any person can. It's the 2-D desktop metaphor that's limiting us today. "

      Did you actually read mine?

      The OS has everything to do with it, if the OS implements time delays and other forms of bloatware to limit the resources I can use on my pc the ability to handle more windows is worthless... the existing 2d interface is sufficient to handle more windows than the OS on the fastest hardware around is capable of running effetively!

      This is like arguing that it would be worthwhile to use extra clockcycles so that the cpu could handle memory faster... sounds great until you realize that the cpu is already infinitely faster than memory and all this would do is use clock cycles that could be doing something else!

      "Why should you have to close it? You're so conditioned to the way you work that you can't "zoom out" and consider that there may be other ways to get things done."

      How about because it wastes pc resources that could be used to actually process your work rapidly? And with your new 3d environment more of my resources are being wasted so the ones I have are even more precious. Perhaps when we reach the world of quantum computers the ability to handle more windows will make sense and I will be able to wastefully toss resources about, in the meantime I need every tick I can get.

      "You may know of people who appear messy, because they have stacks of papers all over their desk. However, some of these people can easily find what they need, despite the apparent mess. These people are able to remember chronologically and spatially where their documents are. A 3-D desktop like I mentioned may actually find a document faster than the traditional nested folders option."

      Actually when you hunt out information on the kind of person you ware speaking of then I will pop up on the top of the search engine... and I agree if I'm understanding your vision right. The problem is that if I'm understanding you correctly you mean to have the entire filesystem exist in a 3d structure essentially leaving every folder open and every program you might use open within the 3d space... again I refer you back to the possiblity of quantum computing where we don't have to worry about resources such as memory and processor. The day will come yes... but today when we buy computers we still have to look at the specs... in 50yrs who knows, maybe every machine will be so ridiculously fast that it's no longer even a concern.

      "you'd realize that almost all of the work is done by my very idle 3-D GPU"

      odd, I seem to recall buying fast graphics hardware so that those resources would also be available to me when I needed them. So that I could move a playing video around on my desktop without hiccups... not so that my video card is so busy rendering a 3d virtual desktop that I run out of video memory when I try to play a windowed game. Or in your world... when I try to simultaneously play 200 windowed games, have my office environment open 37 times, every folder on my machine, the 13 graphics applications I use regularly, my build enviornment, etc, etc, etc, etc.

  13. Re:I think I missed something.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Apple playing catch up? What article did YOU read? It was about Apple being ahead now and Longhorn will catch up in 2005 to Jaguar... which by that time Apple will have released some other OS X cat name...

  14. Re:I think I missed something.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can you provide some examples to back up your claims?

    I use neither WinXP or Jaguar. Both seem to add alot of unnecessary fluff...

  15. Wow, what a great read...did I miss something? by amichalo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What I got out of the article is that because OS X 10.3 will be released before Longhorn, it's gonna "tear up Longhorn".

    What a load! I love OS X but just because its out first doesn't mean it will be better than Longhorn. That list of longhorn's feature set is full of HUGE features and while Apple doesn't have to worry about things like providing a digital image catalog (a la iPhoto), other things like file system search features that takes english language strings and not query language are not so easy to deflect.

    I do believe by 2005 when Longhorn is out, Apple will have made amazing OS X gains, heck it might even be OS XI by then, but I do NOT buy first to market wins.

    Resistance is futile.

    --
    I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
    1. Re:Wow, what a great read...did I miss something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "I do believe by 2005 when Longhorn is out, Apple will have made amazing OS X gains, heck it might even be OS XI by then, but I do NOT buy first to market wins."

      I think the premmise of the article was that because Apple was so far ahead now when compared to XP, the introduction of Panther in a couple months will make that lead massive. In two years time that Massive lead will be growing exponentially.

      While Longhorn may (or may not) be an innovative update, the article is simply saying that it will have to be absolutely INCREDIBLE to catch up to the hights that OS X will have achieved by that time.

    2. Re:Wow, what a great read...did I miss something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      file system search features that takes english language strings and not query language are not so easy to deflect.

      Oh wow, my panties are soaked already. No, really, that's a feature I've been dying for. Huge, really. Apple's really going to be struggling against that one. Yikes.

      Yeah, between that and the Longhorns new "Analog Clock" feature, Apple, like BSD and Stephen King before it, will die.

    3. Re:Wow, what a great read...did I miss something? by amichalo · · Score: 1

      The articel says "Panther" will tear up longhorn - not "the verison of OS X that comes in 2005".

      That stated, I seriously doubt Panther will be able to hold it's own against Longhorn. If the innovations continue, the OS X of 2005 will be able to, but Panther might not. Time will tell

      I love Apples

      --
      I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
    4. Re:Wow, what a great read...did I miss something? by amichalo · · Score: 1

      File system search that takes english language strings as opposed to query strings is huge. It may not be the featuer YOU are waiting on, but that is a major development in user interface design.

      Pause for three seconds, think about it, and then decide if it is still a lame feature.

      --
      I only came here to do two things; kick some ass, and drink some beer...looks like we're almost out of beer.
    5. Re:Wow, what a great read...did I miss something? by andrewski · · Score: 0

      We all know that MS always sticks to its plan, and never deviates from course!

      Bah! They are famous for leaving features out. The point is that longhorn isn't competition yet because it doesn't exist yet as a usable system. It is, from what I can ascertain, a bunch of documentation, and promises about XML and .net, with maybe some code running as GUI hacks on top of XP.

    6. Re:Wow, what a great read...did I miss something? by otuz · · Score: 1

      Isn't that what Sherlock's all about?

    7. Re:Wow, what a great read...did I miss something? by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      Panther competes with XP and will likely erode any areas of XP leadership that exist. Panther+1 is likely to eclipse XP entirely and Panther+2 will make XP look hopelessly outdated. Longhorn will likely be released in the same timframe as Panther+3 or Panther+4 (way to early to tell). So we're going to have up to 3-5 .x OS releases on the Mac side before Longhorn is released. This assumes, Btw that Longhorn's schedule doesn't slip to 2006 as other MS OS releases have in the past.

      Apple has a golden opportunity to re-establish a meaningful, visible lead in the OS area that will drive switchers to their platform. The pricing difference is the lowest it's ever been and likely to remain that way as the largest cost of commodity PCs becomes the Windows license. Since Apple is using most of the same parts, any further pricing pressure on component suppliers will largely also benefit Apple.

      Panther will not necessarily tear up Longhorn based on first to market but Apple's 'every six months a significant new release' schedule will tear up Longhorn's 'releases several years apart' schedule. Adjusting and improving so quickly is a key advantage.

    8. Re:Wow, what a great read...did I miss something? by gig · · Score: 1

      File system searches are better on the Mac than on Windows TODAY. They were better on the Mac than on Windows YESTERDAY. There is no reason to think file system searches won't be better on the Mac than on Windows TOMORROW.

      Especially when tomorrow is 2003 on the Mac and 2005 on Windows.

      The point of the article is that there is a new version of Mac OS coming this fall that MAY have all the features of Windows 2005. The panther animal tears up the longhorn animal (whatever that is).

      Microsoft is working with an enormous monolithic codebase built rent-a-coder style. The main architects of Windows 95 and NT are long gone. They have no security, and poor reliability and a low-quality app platform. They have to interface with phones and TiVo's and all kinds of things and they don't have zero conf networking yet. Bluetooth is not done. Wi-Fi sucks on Windows (compare to the transparent Wi-Fi on the Mac). There are a lot of ways they can be seen to be behind.

      Windows 95 was supposed to be when Microsoft overtook Apple FOR GOOD. Remember? Nobody was going to be able to catch up to mighty Microsoft. It took a while for Apple to rebuild their 20 year old system, but now they have done it, and they did it right and they are way out in front again and gaining. Microsoft looks so bad to Mac users right now. You have to try a new Mac to see how all this stuff that's hard on Windows is now easy on the Mac.

    9. Re:Wow, what a great read...did I miss something? by Llywelyn · · Score: 1

      "I do believe by 2005 when Longhorn is out, Apple will have made amazing OS X gains, heck it might even be OS XI by then, but I do NOT buy first to market wins."

      Ever study Increasing Returns or Market Lock-in?

      --
      Integrate Keynote and LaTeX
  16. Apple doesn't tell you anything... by Steveftoth · · Score: 5, Informative

    The 970 if not used by Apple has had some very strange design decisions. This is the first chip that IBM has made that has the Altivec/VMX implemented. Maybe they want it for linux. But common sense tells us that it's more likely that Apple has indeed requested that feature be implemented because they rely heavily on it in their OS. Having encouraged everyone to use the instructions has kinda locked them into useing them.

    Also, as everyone knows, Apple is famous for not saying anything until the product is in trucks, and heading to stores. So while it is not a guarentee that they will be using it, I would put money on the fact that the next step in the evolution of Apple computers will be twords the PPC 970.

    I do agree that 980/990 prediction is a little early at this stage in the game though.

    1. Re:Apple doesn't tell you anything... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Is the custom IBM Power PC ("Gekko") found in the Gamecube not said to have vector instruction additions? If so, is this of Altivec flavor? In this case the 970 would not be the first IBM chip where they implemented it. Maybe someone here knows more about this.

    2. Re:Apple doesn't tell you anything... by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 2, Informative

      it's a PowerPC 405 derivative - go look at IBMs website if you want to know more. Don't forget the "Flipper" GPU that's also in there...

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    3. Re:Apple doesn't tell you anything... by batboy78 · · Score: 1

      From what I have been reading it sounds like the PPC 980 is the mobile verison fo the 970 to be used in the PowerBook line.

    4. Re:Apple doesn't tell you anything... by drunkenbatman · · Score: 2, Informative

      The 970 if not used by Apple has had some very strange design decisions. This is the first chip that IBM has made that has the Altivec/VMX implemented. Maybe they want it for linux. But common sense tells us that it's more likely that Apple has indeed requested that feature be implemented because they rely heavily on it in their OS. Having encouraged everyone to use the instructions has kinda locked them into useing them.

      While Apple will probably be a customer, the big kicker for IBM is their own server/workstation lines for which the 970 is going to be a big deal but no one really comments on much. Right now the real server growth is being seen in the low and mid-range, and while IBM has the high end covered with the Power4 they still use PPC 604e's and Power3's in their low to midrange servers... where the most growth is.

      Besides Apple, being able to use the PPC970 instead of 400MHz 604e's and 450MHz Power3's in that market (we're talking 1-8 processor $3k-$150+k servers) will help them streamline and lower costs to compete against the tide of intel xeon's and such. Same for the workstation market: IBM is charging up to $15k for 375MHz PPC 604e-based workstations, and up to $40k for a dually 450MHz Power3 workstation. You can see where the SIMD engine of the 970 could be very helpful for their workstation market, as well as the lower costs and higher performance when having to deal with the x86 tide.

      While Apple will probably use it in some form, I get a little worried that Apple fans might be really setting themselves up again for disappointment... I keep hearing that Apple can finally dump motorola and put themselves back on the speed map and I'm just not sure how realistic it is.

      Some of the things that concern me are:

      The assumption that the 970 will have enough initial volume and be priced in such a way that Apple can REALLY incorporate it across their main product lines. Right now a basic dual 1.4GHz machine is ~$3k without adding in any extras such as RAM/etc. The towers aren't selling well for a lot of reasons, and while the same machine with dual 1.6GHz+ 970's might have double the performance and hold their own very well against competing X86 systems... if the machine costs $5-7k in a recession when 3.xGHz P4's cost half the price might not change much. No one seems to have an idea of what the thing will cost in volume, and that's a big gotcha.

      Even if you assume that the PPC970 ends up being very moderately priced, it doesn't end the problems with the G4 and the fact that something has to improve there... if for nothing else than that the PPC970 isn't a portable processor and isn't intended for portables... I simply can't wrap my head around somehow getting a cut-down Power4 processor into a 1" thick laptop. So the PPC970 probably isn't going into the portable range, but rather the G4.

      Apple had some breathing room with their portable line, but love it or hate it the centrino chipsets just kick ass and allow for much smaller x86 laptop designs... so Apple has to improve the portable lines speed. Apple's shown they're able to get the G4 up to 1.42GHz by overclocking it and running it very very hot with huge heat sinks and noisy enclosures... so they can bump the tibook's up to 1.42GHz over the next while which gives them some room... but can they? If you look inside one of those quicksilvers and see the CPU setup... just no way... and I've heard no talk of a PPC970-lite for portables... so something has to happen.

      I just don't want to see the mac community set themselves up for disappointment again... I wouldn't be surprised to see one tower config with a PPC970 plus an xServe config, and it taking years before the PPC970+ even begins to work its way down into the rest of Apple's lines.

    5. Re:Apple doesn't tell you anything... by King+Babar · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The assumption that the 970 will have enough initial volume and be priced in such a way that Apple can REALLY incorporate it across their main product lines. Right now a basic dual 1.4GHz machine is ~$3k without adding in any extras such as RAM/etc. The towers aren't selling well for a lot of reasons, and while the same machine with dual 1.6GHz+ 970's might have double the performance and hold their own very well against competing X86 systems... if the machine costs $5-7k in a recession when 3.xGHz P4's cost half the price might not change much. No one seems to have an idea of what the thing will cost in volume, and that's a big gotcha.

      You can always worry about things, but I think the best reason to assume that Apple (at least) will get decent or better pricing on the chip is just the fact that Apple's interests are aligned with IBM's while they surely aren't with Motorola's. Both Apple and IBM really need an affordable high performance follow-on to the current PPC architecture that doesn't involve Motorola, and IBM has a big interest in having everybody see how screamingly great their new chip is in consumer hardware, since that will (undeservedly) speak louder than all the whitepapers you can write about how well your new servers based on the chip will perform. So I'm less concerned with the price (since Apple will really have to make it more affordable than the current dead tower offerings) and more concerned with ramping up the volume.

      That said, the fact that NOBODY is saying ANYTHING officially gives me hope that things are going really well. We shall, of course, see. Hopefully by August...

      --

      Babar

    6. Re:Apple doesn't tell you anything... by takotech · · Score: 1

      Also, as everyone knows, Apple is famous for not saying anything until the product is in trucks, and heading to stores.

      Riiiight ... Like the 17" Powerbook, FinalCut Pro 4, or DVD Studio 2? Apple is notorious for developing huge hype then taking forever to meet expectations.

  17. The answer is by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    If processor power is so important, why are we so willing to waste it on making windows do funny things when we move them around? Just wondering.


    I think the answer is obvious, we're idiots.
  18. Man, I hope MS doesn't rest on its laurels. by Dr+Reducto · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Apple constantly is putting out OS upgrades, and MS has one big release every so often. Microsoft says it will have a whole lot of things, and then Mac will already have released them and they will be done better.

    1. Re:Man, I hope MS doesn't rest on its laurels. by drunkenbatman · · Score: 1

      Apple constantly is putting out OS upgrades, and MS has one big release every so often. Microsoft says it will have a whole lot of things, and then Mac will already have released them and they will be done better.

      Constantly releasing upgrades is not always a positive... if Apple had the userbase, VARS and agreements MS had to deal with, it wouldn't be in a position to release upgrades as often as it has been. There are trade-offs to both approaches. MS, by only releasing large OS upgrades with new tech every 3-5 years is able to build large user bases of those OS's.

      Ie, Apple doesn't even have its entire base switched over to OSX, and by having all the new tech come out every year it can make it pretty difficult to have a stable user base built up for developers to target... IE, if 10.2 was out for two years instead of 1, you'd see a lot more adoption of the technology Apple has in it.

      You can see the same phenomenon in the PC world with things like compilers and video cards: very few games use all the latest and greatest features of the video cards because they just change too much. If NVIDIA only updated its line of cards once every two years it'd be a whole different story...

      So you might end up with a case of Apple getting all the flashy press with every OS release, but MS having the last laugh due to the advantages of their approach.

  19. oooh, aaaah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Wiggly windows? It's going to take them two more years to bring me wiggly windows, and twirly video clips?

    I've seen effects like this before -- on flashy scenester 'demos' for the Amiga, in 1992. Often surrounded by clouds of vector balls and bad techno. It was pretty back then, and I suppose it's pretty now. But how does this make for good UI?

    Why in the ever-loving world would I want my windows to wiggle when I move them around? It's taken ten years of graphics hardware development just to get them to stand STILL, locked to the refresh rate of the monitor!

    The Aqua interface on OS X has a setting that sucks windows down into the dock. It's just as pretty, and just as irritating. You turn it on when you want to frighten other laptop users with your great big powerful UI. Then you turn it off again, because it's ANNOYING.

    Longhorn schmonghorn. I think the reason Microsoft isn't particularly focused on this is because they realize that it doesn't really matter that much, in terms of productivity. Apple has leapfrogged them in the development of a 3D-accelerated graphics framework, but how much does this really bring to their end-users' productivity level?

    1. Re:oooh, aaaah. by shaitand · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually what apple has that STILL blows ms away is the ability to script the UI, it's called applescript, and it's little spoken of and even more rarely seriously used because people on macs don't like to do things like type. So apple made it possible to record your actions and it would make the script for you... people still don't use it *sighs* that does more for the UI and productivity than any flashing, animated, wiggly, snap to dock effect could ever begin to consider. They develop these things because sadly enough people don't often buy things for real features and benefits... they buy what's pretty.

    2. Re:oooh, aaaah. by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, Applescript only recently came out with a decent development environment. Now that you have a free professional class dev tool (based on gcc) that includes the ability to make applescript applications (applescript studio) I expect that Applescript usage will increase.

      The only thing left to do on apple's part is to fund an applescript evangelist and create some user awareness for the technology.

    3. Re:oooh, aaaah. by shaitand · · Score: 1

      I certainly hate to disagree with someone agreeing with me, but it almost sounds as if your meaning applescript as a serious developer tool... imho this would be as absurd as visual basic being considered a serious developers tool (actually a lil more so, and vb as a language you'd write something to give away, let alone sell is pretty absurd).

      I was speaking of applescript in terms of day to day, using it to automate much of your daily routine would certainly enhance productivity and good tools for this have been around for ages. Yes I realize there are applescript hooks in most mac apps (otherwise you couldn't automate much) and that it could be made quite powerful... but it could never be efficient and I for one don't believe in using a cpu cycle where it's not needed simply to save the guy who only has to do the work once a few seconds (I say this being a programmer myself).

  20. panther pc by ratfynk · · Score: 1

    What would be really interesting is that if Jobs alowed a PC version of Panther for the Hammer with good multi booting built in to come out before Longhorny. Just dreaming. Come on mod me down you mac people, but I just can't afford to buy Apple yet. Have some sympathy.

    --
    OH THE SHAME I fell off the wagon and use sigs again!
    1. Re:panther pc by shaitand · · Score: 1

      I don't see why not, it's not like macs don't actually have 90% pc hardware these days anyway, the only thing good they haven't replaced with pc hardware is the processor... the rest of it is the same crap that is in a pc. IDE drives in place of SCSI... oh yes, this is advancement, dynamic memory in place of static, yeah that's right, each my clock cycles on ram refresh thousands of times a second so that the memory is technically faster while in reality much much slower than static memory with the same access time is... not to mention how much faster my system would be without the ram eating clock cycles.

    2. Re:panther pc by Game+Genie · · Score: 1

      IDE is a travesty, but static ram? Sure, it would be a godsend, but at current prices it's hardly practical. I'd like to see monolithic systems' 1T-SRAM more widely used though. (eg, outside of the gamecube and embedded systems)

    3. Re:panther pc by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just can't afford to buy Apple yet. Have some sympathy

      Do your homework better. Unless you are after crappy base-config'd PCs, nowadays Apple is even cheaper if you load your PC. Especially on laptops.

    4. Re:panther pc by shaitand · · Score: 1

      you think I'm asking a bit much on static memory? *sighs* ok I'll yield buck for pound it's no longer viable... but what I'm saying is that only REAL advantage macs had over pc's was the superior hardware and that advantage is almost gone.... with pc processors getting more and more risc with every release... we'll a mac is not a superior enough machine to justify the price difference anymore. It's time to port the OS and keep it alive. The MacOS has always been a brillant example of how to effectively make a system idiot proof.

    5. Re:panther pc by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Have some sympathy.

      No! It's not gonna happen, so quit whining about it! If you can't afford one now, then start saving your money until you can.

      What people like you keep forgetting about an x86 version of Mac OS X is, even if Apple ported it, no applications would run on it and it wouldn't run on your PC anyway. There is an x86 version of Darwin, the UNIX core of Mac OS X. Take a look at the system requirements. Among other things, AMD processors are not currently supported, and it's only been tested with Intel 440BX motherboards and Intel 8255x ethernet cards.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  21. I believe i stand corrected, or at least educated. by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 1

    Thank you.

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
  22. adjustable pretties by scrotch · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For a while now, I've been thinking that OSes ought to have a couple of different graphics modes. When you're just sporting around the internet or moving files about trying to look busy, the windows should dance and swoosh and have shadows and transparency. Use up all those extra processor cycles. When you start rendering your hour long video composition, they should chill out. Window borders should drop down to 256 colors, shadows should disappear, windows should just close, rather than slither away. It would be nice to have a switch somewhere ( EyeCandy: On/Off ), and even nicer for the OS to flip that switch automatically when the processor load gets really high for more than a few seconds. My 2 cents.

    1. Re:adjustable pretties by OmniVector · · Score: 1

      To be honest, the easiest way to solve such a thing is with a dual CPU setup.. Which is why if you've ever used a dual powermac you're blown away by the responsiveness of the system even when doing heavy processing tasks. It's a shame more cookie-cutter hardware manufacturers haven't realized this like apple has, and released dual cpu ready machines to the consumer. Despite popular belief, they're not that expensive to build and the benefits are noticable to the average user.

      Dual cpus, and Ram are the most overlooked things in a computer. A dual 1ghz will *feel* faster than a 2ghz just due to multiasking the UI and applications, and a machine with 1ghz and 1gb of ram will *feel* faster than a 2ghz with 128mb of ram.

      --
      - tristan
    2. Re:adjustable pretties by jchristopher · · Score: 0
      To be honest, the easiest way to solve such a thing is with a dual CPU setup.. Which is why if you've ever used a dual powermac you're blown away by the responsiveness of the system even when doing heavy processing tasks.

      To be honest, I'm blown away with how much more responsive my PIII 700mhz with Windows 2000 is than a $2000 G4 running OS X.

    3. Re:adjustable pretties by OmniVector · · Score: 2, Interesting

      wow, spoken like a true troll who's probably never run OS X. With about $600 you can put together an 800mhz g4 that i guarantee would run faster than a PIII 700 anyday.

      If you knew anything at all about OS X, you'd also know that it offloads all the visual interface processing to the graphics card, thus leaving the cpu free for processing which would make it even faster than your windows 2k desktop. since it's a g4, an 800 mhz machine will run comparable to an intel 1.6ghz.

      --
      - tristan
    4. Re:adjustable pretties by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 3, Interesting

      err... he's not trolling

      I have at work bunch of Macs running 10.2.6 with GeForce 2MX cards and a motley collection of PCs fitted with Matrox G450 cards running Win2K - irrespective of CPU speed, the Win machines are more responsive for most UI tasks - they're just drawing much simpler things on the screen, and that's all there is to it.

      I spend my OWN money on Apple PCs - I'm no Win troll.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    5. Re:adjustable pretties by OmniVector · · Score: 1

      err... he's not trolling
      yes, he is. look at his recent posts and you'll get an idea of how often he trolls

      I have at work bunch of Macs running 10.2.6 with GeForce 2MX cards and a motley collection of PCs fitted with Matrox G450 cards running Win2K - irrespective of CPU speed, the Win machines are more responsive for most UI tasks - they're just drawing much simpler things on the screen, and that's all there is to it.
      They are drawing simpler things on the screen using CPU power, not the almost always idle GPU. If you're trying to tell me win2k with a matrox g450 draws things like transparency, anti-alias, and shadows, and vector window animations as fast as win2k on a g450 then you're sorely mistaken. do i have to get out a stop watch for you guys? my powerbook running 867mhz redraws faster than my athlon 1700 desktop with a gig of ram in win xp.

      I spend my OWN money on Apple PCs - I'm no Win troll.
      i'm not sure what that's supposed to imply in the context of this situation.

      --
      - tristan
    6. Re:adjustable pretties by Alan+Partridge · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Be serious, man. There's no doubt that Jaguar offloads compositing tasks to the GPU, just as there's no doubt that Quartz involves a LOT more work than Win2K's display model, but the fact remains that it takes FAr longer to scroll in most OSX windows, FAR longer to call a new finder window than a new Win2k Explorer and FAR longer to bring up large directories. OSX has a lot of things going for it, but UI speed isn't one of them.

      And what's all that bollocks about an 800Mhz G4 being as fast as a 1.6Ghz "Intel". What are you on about? If it's a theoretical PIII, you're mad; if it's a P4 you're close; if it's an AMD chip you're just plain WRONG.

      --
      That was classic intercourse!
    7. Re:adjustable pretties by jchristopher · · Score: 1
      If you knew anything at all about OS X

      I know plenty, having used Macs since the days of my first Mac, an LC II. That LC II (I think it was 16mhz, if I remember correctly) had a more responsive GUI than OS X. Apple should be embarassed.

      And don't hit me with the "you must have misconfigured your system" excuse. Even the machines at the Apple store, which presumably should be the BEST example of Apple technology, still "feel" slow.

      That doesn't mean they will benchmark slow, for example, on SETI. I'm just saying the GUI is still freaking slow, and everyone who has used one knows it.

    8. Re:adjustable pretties by jchristopher · · Score: 1
      No one is arguing that Windows 2000 is drawing more stuff than OS X. I think we all agree that OS X is doing some hardcore GUI shit that pushes the system to the limit.

      The point is that it is doing so in a slow fashion, which is frustrating, and also many people, including myself feel that many CPU cycles are wasted on eye candy that would be better spent making the GUI responsive.

      I'm not some Wintroll that's never used Macs. I owned an iBook that I bought to use for some video editing. That project never got finished, because the computer was so unbelievably slow I got frustrated every time I used it (yes, I had plenty of RAM). That computer went on eBay.

      I LIKE OS X. I hope some day Apple fixes the slow GUI problem. To this day, every browser feels like molasses compared to Windows. To me, that's unacceptable, especially given the price of the machines.

  23. Extra millseconds by spooje · · Score: 5, Informative

    With OSX you don't lose CPU cycles for all the extra animation. Quartz off loads the Open GL and most vector processes to your video card. This frees up your CPU for real tasks.

    --
    Tea and kung-fu. Life is good. Rising Phoenix
    1. Re:Extra millseconds by shaitand · · Score: 1, Interesting

      and bogs down the video card, I'm sure that pleases the graphic and video enthusiests who use mac's eh?

      Last I checked it's a gui system, performance is FELT by the speed that graphics render and draw... slowing down the video card may not slow the rest of the system (which of course uses no resources to send these instructions to the video card, oh no, that can't happen) but slowing down the video card kills perfomance in anything video related, kills performance when you try to do something like oh... move the quicktime window with something playing. Kills games and anything else that needs redenered. More important than real performance of course is that it makes the system FEEL slower.

    2. Re:Extra millseconds by Toraz+Chryx · · Score: 4, Informative

      You're assuming that the videocard will be maxed out, this doesn't appear to be the case.
      You're also assuming that the majority of graphics/video tasks hit the videocard, most seem to be software at this point (and dripping with altivec code)

      give this a look

      having the video subsystem handle things that were previously handled by the processor (like window composition) is faster than the cpu doing it, and also frees up the cpu do throw horsepower at an FCP render :)

    3. Re:Extra millseconds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      ... but slowing down the video card kills perfomance in anything video related, kills performance when you try to do something like oh... move the quicktime window with something playing.

      You know not of what you speak. You've obviously never used a Mac with Quartz Extreme. If you had, you'd know that this is exactly one of the situations that benefits the most from QE.

      Kills games and anything else that needs redenered.

      Once again, you're an idiot. Games are generally fullscreen, and write directly to the framebuffer. They go completely around the rest of the interface as if it weren't there. That's the way it was before QE, and the way it is now.

      More important than real performance of course is that it makes the system FEEL slower.

      Your entire argument seems to be that a feature that speeds up interface performance makes the system feel slower. Pardon me if I go away from this thinking that you're a drunken retarded child, because I can't think of anyone else that could come up with something so stupid.

    4. Re:Extra millseconds by chasingporsches · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I use a PowerMac G4 350MHz, 128MB RAM running OS X.2.5 and a 16MB video card (a riva or something similar) and even on this older machine, everything still runs smooth no matter how many programs i have open, and even with other programs running, i can play DVDs flawless too. i don't consider that a problem, especially with the newer machines with faster video cards and more video memory

    5. Re:Extra millseconds by drunkenbatman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      With OSX you don't lose CPU cycles for all the extra animation. Quartz off loads the Open GL and most vector processes to your video card. This frees up your CPU for real tasks.

      No it doesn't- you haven't read the docs on what Quartz Extreme actually does... There are a few processes Quartz has to use to get stuff onto the screen, one of which is compositing. The compositing stage is where OSX takes the generated windows from the window manager process and slaps them together. That is all that QE accelerates.

      In other words, when you control-click on a menu item on a non-QE machine it has to generate and draw the view (window) along which includes having to calculate the drop shadow, icons, etc. Then the window manager has to composite it over whatever it behind it and generate what you should be seeing (ie, if there is a blue window behind it the menu will be tinted blue as it's slightly transparent).

      On a QE-enabled machine, the window manager is able to offload the last part of the process to the video card: compositing. This is still a huge boon, especially in certain circumstances, such as having a transparent terminal window running top will see a speedup, but you STILL have a big hit of overhead due to all the windows having to be drawn as they are in quartz (ie, a ton of stuff still has to be done in software to generate all the pretty stuff).

    6. Re:Extra millseconds by shaitand · · Score: 0

      Maybe I overspoke my point a bit, I'm certainly not against having the video card handle the rendering of windows... what I'm against is the eyecandy and my argument is that bloat is bloat, the video card is even less capable of handling bloat than the ultra fast cpu. I'm all for using the gpu to render graphics... that's what the gpu is for, I'm against the eye candy and bloat that will always use resources better used elsewhere. It's not like I know too many people who don't run into the walls of modern computing resources regularly. We have a long way to go before machines are fast enough to keep up... let alone waste gpu, or cpu cycles ;)

    7. Re:Extra millseconds by shaitand · · Score: 1

      Actually your eloquent tongue makes it apparent that you are indeed a "drunken retarded child".

      However although rereading my post it does read differently than I intended. What I'm against isn't the gpu handling graphics... this is what the gpu is for, it's only fitting that it handle graphics. What I'm against is the bloat and the eyecandy, and since the gpu has even less resources than the cpu to begin with, the bloat hits extra hard.

      If you disagree with me then by all means respond in your graceful manner. It was my mistake, my post did read incorrectly.

  24. Apple delivers and MS hypes by afantee · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Since its initial release just 2 years ago, Mac OS X has had 2 major revisions and numerous minor updates with significant performance gain and countless new features. In contrast, Win XP remains virtually unchanged apart from a single service pack and a large number of security patches.

    MS is just full of puffs and bluffs. They have been talking about .NET, Longhorn, speech recognition for so many years, but failed deliver any meaningful result. Now we know that Longhorn is at least 2 years away, and WinFS is just a Windows Service on top of NTSF rather than a revolutionary file system. The only things really worth mentioning in Longhorn appears to be the Aero GUI and Window rendering through GPU, basicly a second rate imitation of Aqua and Quartz Extreme.

    MS is just a slow dinosaur that has to die sooner or later due to its total incapacity to innovate. Apple is 60 times smaller than MS, and yet makes more and better software than the Redmond beast, in addition to cool hardware innovations like Xserve, Xserve RAID, iPod, iMac, PowerBook, and so on.

    Although Win XP has some nice features, but it just doesn't feel nearly refined as Mac OS X. Judging from the recent leaks, Longhorn can't even match Jaguar, let alone Panther. And no one can imagine how much better OS X would be by 2005.

    1. Re:Apple delivers and MS hypes by Arkham · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Looking at corporate America where I've worked, I can say unequivocally that even if the next release of Windows set your chair on fire every time you booted it, it would probably still remain the corporate standard for years to come.

      Microsoft is SO completely entrenched in the dektops of companies that nothing, no matter how great it is, could change it. If for no other reason, Exchange ensures a dependency on Windows. IT support weenies aren't trained to support more than one platform, and Windows is it.

      I carry my iBook to work every day so I don't have to do software development on Windows 2000. Whyen people come to my desk and see tools like BBEdit and SQLGrinder, the ooh and ahh. But none of that matters. Windows is the standard, and it's gonna stay that way.

      --
      - Vincit qui patitur.
    2. Re:Apple delivers and MS hypes by 777333ddd · · Score: 1

      From Apple's POV, they don't need to change Windows dominance. Just getting a few % points of those Win shops could double or triple AAPL's profits.

    3. Re:Apple delivers and MS hypes by qengho · · Score: 1


      I can say unequivocally that even if the next release of Windows set your chair on fire every time you booted it, it would probably still remain the corporate standard for years to come.

      Thanks for posting that. Best laugh I've had all week.

    4. Re:Apple delivers and MS hypes by Arkham · · Score: 0

      Oh I absolutelty agree. 2% of a market of 20 billion computers is plenty to sustain a company like Apple.

      Some people still think there's a fight for the desktop going on. That fight is over for now. The masses chose Windows. Smart people might choose alternatives like Linux or MacOS X, but Windows won the desktop.

      --
      - Vincit qui patitur.
    5. Re:Apple delivers and MS hypes by geek · · Score: 1

      I disagree on corporate America being entrenched in MS. You would be surprised how quickly a business will switch when it effects their bottom line.

      The fact is Apple isn't competitive in the office yet. They need real office solutions, things for business management, accounting (quickbooks doesn't cut it) and they need a versatile and scalable exchange killer. Prices need to come down too.

      Apple's stylish machines are nice but companies don't care about style. Apple REALLY needs a less stylish and cheaper line of business machines that don't sacrifice speed. Until this happens Apple will continue to eat the PC markets dust. I'm a home user so a Mac is great for me. If I was a business owner I wouldn't dare spend the extra $1-2k per machine on Macs. That money is better spent on wages and equipment/marketing/etc. I honestly don't know wtf Jobs is thinking. Apple will always be a niche platform struggling for life unless they can put something viable together for businesses.

    6. Re:Apple delivers and MS hypes by afantee · · Score: 1

      Actually, Apple is quite competitive. An eMac costs as little as $799, an iBook $999, and both have more than enough power and features for almost any business. Further more, Apple hardware typically lasts longer, requires much less maintenance, and comes with more and better software than Wintel machines, so in the long run Macs are cheaper.

    7. Re:Apple delivers and MS hypes by geek · · Score: 1

      eMacs and iBooks do not cut it in business, sorry pal. That line has been regurgitated so many times it's pathetic. Apple has ZERO decent business machines, unless you're a designer. That's the way it is, deal with it.

    8. Re:Apple delivers and MS hypes by phillymjs · · Score: 2

      eMacs and iBooks do not cut it in business, sorry pal.

      Gee, that's funny-- one of my clients is a large law firm in downtown Philadelphia who has nothing but eMacs and iBooks, and a G4 tower serving files. Maybe I'd better go tell them to just give up, because "geek" on /. says that their machines don't cut it in business.

      I guess they're only able to run the firm on eMacs and iBooks because they don't know their machines aren't good enough for business use-- kinda like how Wile E. Coyote doesn't fall, as long as he doesn't notice he walked off the cliff, huh?

      ~Philly

    9. Re:Apple delivers and MS hypes by geek · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      So ONE law firm in ONE part of the world is capable of pulling it off. Gee no wonder it's a 2% market share. Get over it dumb shit, Macs don't cut it in the office.

    10. Re:Apple delivers and MS hypes by afantee · · Score: 1

      An idiot like you really deserves the ugly and bug-ridden dirty Windows, because you don't have the basic intelligence to look for better alternatives. You are wasting my time by making stupid generalization without any factual basis.

      As a long time C++ and Java programmer on Windows and Unix, I now do all programming as well as Web design, graphics and everything else on an iBook and never been happier. I do use Win 2K and XP regularly to test my work, but Mac OS X makes Windows feel like shit. Most of the best applications have Mac versions which are usually better than Windows counterpart, including Adobe PhotoShop / InDesign / Illustrator, Macromedia Flash / FireWorks / DreamWeaver / FreeHand / Director, MS Office, Maya, etc.

      There are many excellent Mac applications that are not available for Windows, such as Final Cut Pro, Shake, DVD Studio Pro, Shake, iLife, iTune Music Store. There are more good Web browsers on the Mac, and Safari in its beta form is already miles ahead of MS IE. Apple hardware also comes with more and better quality free software than Wintel boxes.

      Mac OS X is just a dream platform for geeks with the best programming environment (Cocoa, Carbon, Java, Unix) and dozens of professional programming tools for Java / C/C++ / Objective C/C++ / Perl / Python / Ruby / Apache / PHP and many other open and standard. While MS Visual Studio .NET costs more than $3000, all Apple tools are free and better.

      Now, are you going to tell me why "eMacs and iBooks do not cut it in business"?

    11. Re:Apple delivers and MS hypes by jcr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Microsoft is SO completely entrenched in the dektops of companies that nothing, no matter how great it is, could change it.

      People could (and did) make the same argument in 1982 regarding IBM mainframes vs. PC's. The status quo is never permanent, no matter how formidable it may appear.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  25. Dumb by aufecht · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Because flapping-in-the-wind-flag-like windows are something that will REALLY boost productivity. Windows is now nothing more than a screensaver. "Oh, that's cool, what is it?" "Oh, that's my new screensaver, Windows" "Cool, can I check my email?" "Sure, let me reboot into Linux"

  26. Brushed metal... by SvnLyrBrto · · Score: 5, Informative
    > that frickin' metallic theme that Apple puts on everything
    > now (despite their design guidelines) - yuck! Brushed
    > metal looks good on hardware, not on software.

    Brushed metal is indeed annoying. Fortunately, it's simplicity itself to be rid of. Wether an application used Aqua or brushed metal widgets is defined by a single variable in an xml file inside the application bundle. Change that variable, restart the application, and the accursed brushed metal is gone!

    There are free programs that'll demetallify all your apps in one step; or do so on an app by app basis, and keep track of the altered ones in a central location.

    If you're some kind of freak, you can even ADD the brushed metal skin to applications that didn't use it in the first place!

    cya,
    john

    --
    Imagine all the people...
    1. Re:Brushed metal... by Tumbleweed · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I knew about the apps to remove the brushed metal from everything, but why is that even necessary?

      Plus, my biggest gripe is with all that wasted window chrome - I don't know of anything that can be done about that. :(

      Still, even with it's faults, I'd rather be using OS X than what I'm using now (Win2K).

    2. Re:Brushed metal... by dbrutus · · Score: 1

      You're pointing out one of the great things that Apple's pushing, universal XML pref files. This makes creating 3rd party tools a snap and even hand editing prefs very, very easy. I wish that the OSS group would get behind that.

    3. Re:Brushed metal... by jo_ham · · Score: 2, Informative

      What exactly do you mean by wasted windo chrome?

      OS X looks pretty, there's no denying it. It does have lots of "eye candy" effects and pretty icons.

      However, you can turn all this off, including the toolbars in the Finder windows.

      You can turn off dock magnification and resizing. You can turn off the animation effect for minimising windows. You can turn off dock bouncing for opening apps.

      The only eye candy you can't disable is the way the plus, minus and x symbols appear in the red, yellow and green circles in the window corners when you hover over them (or the very useful way that the close box fills with a dot if the window has unsaved information in it).

      You also can't disable the way the preference panes and file open/save dialog boxes change size dynamically when you expand them.

      It's quite a clean interface overall, and quite customisable. The fact that it looks nice doesn't mean it's wasted - I'm sure Apple could make it look like blocky, grey rectangular box, plain windows style, but I doubt they'd gain any added performance from this look (assming all the animation is turned off).

  27. Re:You forgot by foshizzlemynizzle · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    obviously you forgot that besides being a complet closet case, you have no intelligence or bravery whatsoever. Itunes 4 is one the BEST mp-3 applications created. Jaguar may look pretty but it backs some shit up with UNIX. So stop being such a jackass and recongnize that is clearly the better computer compared to any pile of microsoft infested crap. Jesus Christ.

  28. Inaccuracies by kleinmatic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Maybe I'm not the first to mention this, but the article is full of inaccuracies. OS X has had the "ability to create profiles that travel with them among machines," since it was still NextStep (and it had shared directory services before Active Directory was a twinkle in its daddy's eye). I'm not sure what "Terminal Services' access to multiple desktops" means, but Apple Remote Desktop (or the free VNC) will give you most of what Terminal Services gives you. Also, they spelled "Lifescape Solutions's Picassa" wrong (it only has one s). I don't mean to be a nerd about it, but it kind of shoots their point -- which I don't think is far wrong -- in the foot.

    1. Re:Inaccuracies by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      S X has had the "ability to create profiles that travel with them among machines," since it was still NextStep (and it had shared directory services before Active Directory was a twinkle in its daddy's eye).

      Not without Mac OS X Server, which costs money.

      I'm not sure what "Terminal Services' access to multiple desktops" means, but Apple Remote Desktop (or the free VNC) will give you most of what Terminal Services gives you.

      Apple Remote Desktop also costs money; Terminal Services is free (for a single connection, which is all most people need). I've been using VNC heavily for the past couple of weeks, and it's SLOW, just because of the way it works. Actually what I really miss in Mac OS X is the ability to run individual applications (not an entire desktop) remotely, like I can with X11.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    2. Re:Inaccuracies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the tightvnc fink package is pretty fast. it made a world of difference for me.

      all the other mac solutions are ridiculously slow.

  29. Re:Natural Language Searching by tyrione · · Score: 1


    Not to burst your bubble but that was and has been developed for Openstep 4 MECCA and was never implemented.



    Just because it isn't currently out doesn't mean it hasn't been developed.

  30. Don't forget it's MS we're talking about by Andre+Breton · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I wonder if people haven't learned anything from history. If Microsoft says something will be ready in 2 years, well... I would at least add another 12 months to that. (Or be prepared to never here again of it)
    And this presentation coming from Microsoft I wouldn't be surprised if it ran on a Mac.

    Regarding Extremetech's article: How extreme can their IT knowledge be if some forum member (!) has to enlighten them on that "Apple has being up and running with their Quartz Compositor engine in OS X, which is now hardware accelerated as Quartz Extreme in Mac OS X 10.2 (Jaguar), and that MS is once again playing catch-up and acting as if it's new stuff." Hiding under stones much?

    Besides: The public beta of Mac OS X came out September 2000 and Quartz was demo'd to the public half a year before that by Steve Jobs. So implementing wiggly windows takes MS 5 years. More like 6 (see above)...

    1. Re:Don't forget it's MS we're talking about by ZxCv · · Score: 1

      Besides: The public beta of Mac OS X came out September 2000 and Quartz was demo'd to the public half a year before that by Steve Jobs. ...

      Of course I could be wrong, but I thought the first public demo of Quartz was at the dev conf before Jaguar's release...

      --

      Perl - $Just @when->$you ${thought} s/yn/tax/ &couldn\'t %get $worse;
    2. Re:Don't forget it's MS we're talking about by Andre+Breton · · Score: 1
      Of course I could be wrong, but I thought the first public demo of Quartz was at the dev conf before Jaguar's release...

      Be kind, rewind? The public beta of course was pre 10.0. Jaguar is 10.2. I'm pretty sure what you're talking about is instead Quartz extreme?!

    3. Re:Don't forget it's MS we're talking about by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      Quartz was demonstrated before the first beta release of Mac OS X. Quartz Extreme is the version that uses a 3D video card to to hardware rendering, and was introduced in Mac OS 10.2.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  31. Eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where's the point in that, I think the minimise in OSX is cool, but to be able to pick a window up and shake it in frustration?

    Will be interesting to see if the release rotating monitors to compensate for that amazing desktop effect they have created.

  32. I agree with your post.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    However, even if you make something really easy to use it isn't easy enough for most people. I've often seen users dismiss dialog boxes without even reading them ! I've heard users discuss applications they use and they reckon that they have tempers.

    Once you get people away from their flow of doing things then you end up with a load of FUD.

    At the LUG I go to, no one really wants to shift people to systems they aren't comfortable with. The main trouble being is that people don't want to take the time (even a few minutes) to experiment with things on computers. They give up after a few trys and won't even bother to try to read the docs.

    Most people notice stuff like the eye candy (fonts, themes and screesavers). And by god if fuck up their email you'll be in for it!! ;)

    Your conclusions are about right. No one should run a windows server if they don't really have to ;) The macs are still too expensive alas.

  33. You can't afford Apple... Apple can't afford... by jo_ham · · Score: 1

    ..to let go of its hardware platform.

    Apple would sink like a stone if if released it's Godlike OS on PC hardware.

    As well as having to redo all the apps desgined for PPC, they'd lose sales hand over fist on their hardware because people would buy crap machines.

    The stability would drop too, since the careful selection of components in off-the-shelf Mac computers would be lost.

    One of the reasons the Windows experience is so bad is the "sell the CPU" method - Dell will sell you a box with a "super fast, super excellent 3Ghz P4!!" for $700. To keep the price that low, of course, the rest of the components are rubbish. Built in graphics and sound, cheap case, budget monitor etc. Windows is much better when you go for a balanced approach - get a 1.5Ghz chip instead and use the money you save to flesh out the other components a bit, but a 1.5Ghz system won't sell as well as a 3Ghz system, no matter how good the overall quality is.

  34. Processor Usage by Da+Penguin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    > If processor power is so important,
    > why are we so willing to waste it on making
    > windows do funny things when we move them
    > around? Just wondering

    That's why all of this stuff is being moved to the graphics card. The advanced card capabilities are just sitting there twiddling their thumbs until you start real graphics work, so why not use them!

  35. hmmm by mgbaron · · Score: 3, Insightful

    To be honest, this article didnt say very much about why "panther may tear up longhorn." It did however point out that panther is due out this summer, and longhorn not till 2005, making the comparison somewhat of a bad one. Who is really comapring the two anyway? Seems like we ought to wait until the 2003 mac OS to compare.

    Aside from that I have one more question. Does anyone know if there will be a 64-bit version of longhorn, or if it will be exclusively 64-bit?

  36. Photostickies. by Amiasian · · Score: 1

    I'm not sure if this counts for odd window sizing and such with non-straight curves, but I use an app called 'Photostickies' http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/ 10949 for doing some weird screen effects including keying out parts, etc. And this acts as a window which can play with transitions if you have multiple pictures loaded (probably not a movie, but animation in a non-standard window, etc.). OS X has all of this (as we well know) but it's not in too much active use. Photostickies is fun, but hardly practical. Still, it is kind of cool to be able to layer random objects on top of windows for no reasons. Like, I'll have two pictures of my hand (background / the palm - and - foreground / fingers) to layer on a window so it looks as though my hand is grabbing the frame of the window. Etc.
    Yeah. Just a little curiosity program I thought I'd mention.

  37. Get Microsoft by D13d · · Score: 0

    Perhaps Apple should release OSX on the x86 platform. I would definately think that many would run from Microsoft Operating systems then. I think Apple would make a Killing, and with that stated it would rip up on Longhorn. Any particular reason why Apple hasn't done this?

    1. Re:Get Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Apple is NOT a software company as M$. Apple does hardware as well. Releasing its OS to x86 architecture would do more harm then ever.

      It is not the $129 OS X sales that brings cash flow to the company, it is the hardware sales.

      Today one of the reasons why people buy Apple computers - in addition to better hardware, construction details and the unique approach to the computing experience itself - is the fact that it is the only platform where to run Apple OS.

    2. Re:Get Microsoft by D13d · · Score: 1

      I for one do not think it would do more harm than good. I respect your opinion, but I feel that those of us that use Apple computers would stay with Apple hardware for that exact reason- that it is better. It would open up the world of Apple to new users. Who would in return very likely go to the Mac Hardware. There was actually a post on slashdot awhile ago with an interesting subject- apple splitting into two seperate parts, hardware and software. I believe Apple even has a team looking into the possibilities of this and x86, not sure of the x86 part though. For all I can say it is just a thought and one that would have interesting ramifications for M$ as you put it. I would like to see nothing more than Apple to become the choice for the masses. Any other thoughts?

    3. Re:Get Microsoft by phillymjs · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It would open up the world of Apple to new users. Who would in return very likely go to the Mac Hardware...Any other thoughts?

      Yeah-- you're wrong, wrong, WRONG!

      1) What makes you think the people who buy shitbox $399 PCs will suddenly be willing to pay significantly more for genuine Apple hardware because then they could use Mac OS X on its 'native' hardware? That's how it is now, and the aforementioned cheap bastards are not seeing the light and beating a path to Apple's door, checkbooks and credit cards in hand.

      2) Apple tried letting their hardware be cloned in the 90's, and it almost killed them. The cloners were supposed to fill the low-end, entry-level machine niche and leave the high end to Apple. What they did instead was produce cheaper high-end hardware than Apple ever could. They could do this for the same reasons Dell and Gateway do it-- they're just box stuffers, with very limited R&D overhead. Meanwhile, Apple has to charge more to offset the cost of developing the OS, so their prices are naturally higher. People, being the cheap bastards that they are, usually buy according to price, so they started buying clones and stopped buying the real Macs that paid for the OS development. Result: Apple started bleeding. Heavily. Luckily they managed to kill the cloning business before it killed them.

      3) What makes Macs special is the ultra-tight integration of software and hardware-- THAT is why they work so well. Sell a copy of OS X that can run on commodity PC hardware, and it's not going to work that well, period. How do I know this? Because Microsoft has already been laboring for 20 years trying to get thousands of commodity PC hardware components to play nice together, every time and in any combination. They have more people and way more money to throw at the problem than Apple does, and still they have failed. And, if you missed all the news from the WinHEC conference a week or two ago, they are now trending toward doing sort of what Apple does-- working with OEMs so there will be hardware designed from the start to work with future versions of Windows, as opposed to just being on some Hardware Compatibility List that only means "it *should* work, we've *seen* it work, but it might not work when *you* try it-- and that's *your* problem."

      ~Philly

    4. Re:Get Microsoft by Phroggy · · Score: 1

      If Apple did release an x86 version of Mac OS X, no applications would run on it and it wouldn't run on your PC anyway. There is an x86 version of Darwin, the UNIX core of Mac OS X. It currently supports Intel 440BX motherboards, PIIX4 IDE controllers, and Intel 8255x ethernet cards. AMD processors do not currently work.

      If you can write Darwin drivers for all your hardware (and everybody else's hardware), half the problem will be solved. Then you just have to get all the application developers to port their software, which shouldn't be too hard IF they wrote it cleanly.

      Of course, even if all this happened, Apple still wants to sell Macs, not operating systems.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
  38. Please back up your claim... by douglasq · · Score: 1

    You say "Macs don't cut it in the office" but you do not say why.

    Macs have a very capable version of MS-Office and when I worked in public relations we used little else.

    What are Macs lacking in your opinion that they cannot "cut it" in your average, 9-to-5, office environment?

    Add numerous chat clients, email clients and web browsers and you have a platform that is just fine in the office.

    --
    "Form should follow function...unless it's just plain ugly."
    1. Re:Please back up your claim... by geek · · Score: 1

      Try reading the whole thread before responding next time.

    2. Re:Please back up your claim... by douglasq · · Score: 1

      I read it and, at your request, reread it.

      Ya know, I have worked for small firms and large dotcoms and none were dependent on Exchange Server.

      As for accounting, small firms do quite well with Quickbooks. It happens everyday, probably without you ever hearing about it. The larger firms I was associated it with used proprietary solutions.

      You still haven't said anything to back up your original point.

      --
      "Form should follow function...unless it's just plain ugly."
  39. Huh? by douglasq · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Your comment makes so little sense, I cannot even tell who you are trying to insult. I have to give it "the confused cocker-spaniel head-tilt."

    --
    "Form should follow function...unless it's just plain ugly."
  40. Panther to tear up Longhorn? by McAddress · · Score: 4, Interesting
    It is interesting that everyone seems that it is fair to compare a (almost) current OS to a hype-only possible OS that will not reach the market for another 2 years at the minimum.

    It is like comparing a 2003 car to a 2005 one.

    But the scariest part is that the 2003 wins. gofigure

    1. Re:Panther to tear up Longhorn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Segues nicely into the comparison I always make when I evangelize Macs. Buying a Mac is like buying a german car, buying a Windows PC is like buying an american car. They both may get you to the same place in the same amount of time, but you're going to enjoy the ride in the german car a lot more. I'd take a 2001 BMW 330 over a 2003 Gran Prix any day.

  41. Microsoft's truth in advertising by Zhe+Mappel · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Did you watch the videos on Extreme-Tech?

    Sure, they're only proof of concept things. But one doesn't prove future brilliance by trotting out today's junk. Look at them, especially the last one - chaos, clutter, disarrangement and dislocation, all set ajumble and rotating like Frank Poole after HAL's had his way with him. Who among us used to the differences between Windoze and Apple OS doesn't see in that a sort of perfect realization of Microsoft's design philosophy? Clutter, chaos, things spinning out of control, a world of glommed-on crap with the user left gawping and wondering what (other than paying for the privilege) his incidental role in this GPU-driven wilderness might be...

    The documents being shaken out like bed sheets - that could really increase business productivity, if for no other reason than it'll make it even harder to read management's nonsense! ;-)

    Give fools more powerful technology, and their foolishness only grows.