I think what many Macintosh users forget is that what has set the Apple OS apart from Windows over these troublesome decades has been the key issue of User Friendliness. Mac's have been the dominate computer in the educational market because children of all ages have been able to understand the Mac OS with just a few simple minutes of instruction. My family owned the very first Macintosh ($2,500 with a 9 inch grey-scale monitor built in), then a Quadra 605, then an iMac, and now a G4. While Compaq's, Dells and other PC (Windows oriented) companies had lower prices, the Macintosh OS pulled us back each time.
I might as well put this down on the table now, because it is one of my main points. I know and work with DOS, LINUX, UNIX and the Mac OS. DOS is old, but when a PC crashes, god help those who are not familiar with its commands. While Linux and Unix are very stable systems, they are NOT FAMILY ORIENTED. At work, we run 64 Sun Servers all using Unix. Trying to get 64 servers to run different software, test files, upload and download 100Gig files, while remaining on a network is really only possible with Unix. Otherwise, it is an ugly, brash piece of software which should not be brought inside the doors of a family household. Why on earth would you use Unix or even Linux for that matter on a family computer?
While developers or "guru's" may want to use Linux/Unix, that is not the market that Apple has traditionally targeted. Apple add's for the iMac and iMovie (an excellant program by the way) show small children dancing around, or family movies. Try explaining to a 60 year old grandfather how to use Linux, and he will either belt you to death, or buy Windows.
In my opinion, Apple has made a serious marketing mistake. Firstly, any child (as we have seen in the news lately) can hack a Linux run server, where as Mac OS X Server (based on the traditional OS X) has been adopted by the United States Army because it is so secure. If Linux based Kernels are used in OS X (which as of the latest beta release they are), then hacking a mac will now simply require writing a generic virus. No longer with programs like the LUVBUG or the MELISSA virus (the lesser know CHEYRLOBAL or HAMPSTER viruses are equally as terrible) simply affect PC's or Linux/Unix based computers.
Apple should not take away what has made it great for all these years, the Finder. Institutions for "mentally handicapped" people use the Macintosh in order for teachers to interact with students. The new finder is hardly as simple to use, rather it is simply a picture best left untouched, an immovable gateway into the HD (Hard Drive). Simply making an OS more compatible for programmers is not what Apple should do. Leave the OS intact, but at the same time, spawn off a Mac OS X Dev --> for developers. Keep Mac OS X's interface intact, put in a Linux Kernal, and spread small bits of Linux compatability code throughout, and then let the developers use their own software to create games, etc.
Will I upgrade to OS X? No. While the design is amazing, what I gain in eye-candy, I loose in user-friendliness, and the trade off is far from even. Hopefully, Apple will learn from what I consider to be a worse mistake than Copland (the mistake being that they are actually selling it). If you are used to Linux, then Mac OS X is for you, but for anyone who is a true Mac OS user at heart, give this new operating system a wide berth.
Adi Bridges
webmaster@macology.com
Macology - The study of all things Macintosh
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As I travel through the
gates of hell to face the
deamons, I know my knife
is by my side, and that
all hell can't stop me