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#51 | |||
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iOS on iPad/iPhone/iPod Touch will keep on using SpringBoard as a UI and UIKit as its UI widget framework. OS X, whatever it's called will keep on using Finder as a UI and AppKit as its widget set. The systems are already merged people. They have always been merged. The differences are there for a reason and they'll stay there for a reason. I don't know why I bother anymore. Bunch of "end of world" propagandists just want to piss the neophyte users that don't know any better. Quote:
Not all UNIX systems derive their code or still use much of the old Bell Labs (AT&T) code base that is known as SysV (and its predecessors). The UNIX certification process is simply a compatibility test suite for a specification known as the SUS (Single Unix Specification) that tests adherence to this specification. You don't need any actual Ken Thompson code, you just need to be compatible to be called UNIX. Quote:
The move to NeXTStep as the basis for OS X was a genius move by Apple. The old system just didn't have the room to grow anymore. Same with Microsoft moving to NT. They are now set until the next big thing comes along and redefines computing like UNIX did in 1972 (yes, I know they started earlier on the project, following Bell Labs' withdrawal from the MULTICS project). But hey, what do I know about this stuff ?
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles Last edited by KnightWRX; Mar 20, 2012 at 05:45 AM. |
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#52 |
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double.
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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#53 | |
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Maybe "huge merge of user interfaces" wasn't the best of words, but the two OSs will slowly become one soon enough, as we've seen, with both taking interface advancements from each other. iOS 7 for the Mac will be more iOS like and less OS X like, but it'll really be for marketing more than anything. Same release cycle. I'm not saying that I think it would be a good thing either, I'm just saying my predictions, not my wishes. You believe that in 1.5 years time when Apple supposedly releases iOS 7, they'll still be using the same springboard GUI, especially on the iPad?
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15" MacBook Pro 2GHz i7 4GB 750GB | Mac mini 2.3GHz i7 16GB 1TB Fusion | OS X 10.8.3 iPhone 5 64GB | Apple TV 3 1080p | iOS 6.1.4 |
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The systems already don't differ much. Again : UIKit/Springboard vs AppKit/Finder. [QUOTE=Kilamite;14570056]Maybe "huge merge of user interfaces" wasn't the best of words, but the two OSs will slowly become one soon enough, as we've seen, with both taking interface advancements from each other. Quote:
The UIs are different because the input paradigms are different. Again, don't know why I bother, you obviously don't know about how the systems are built, you're just talking about a "what I see is totally different!" perspective, completly ignoring the huge hulking mass of ice under the water.
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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#55 | |
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I know iOS is essentially just OS X, Jobs introduced it that way with the iPhone launch. I'm talking about marketing. OS X will become iOS as a name. But they'll merge a few other user interface things too. Yes, one is touch based, one is keyboard/mouse based, but gestures for notifications on the ML show that Apple is taking a lot of cues from iOS and moving them to OS X. Apple has said OS X is on a yearly cycle. iOS is also on a yearly cycle. With OS X dropping the Mac name, and getting more iOS features, from a marketing perspective, it would make more sense to just drop OS X and call it iOS instead. Why have a different OS name for your laptop and tablets? It makes them appear fragmented. Remember, this is mainly just for marketing, before you start crying me a river about how I don't understand how systems are built.
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15" MacBook Pro 2GHz i7 4GB 750GB | Mac mini 2.3GHz i7 16GB 1TB Fusion | OS X 10.8.3 iPhone 5 64GB | Apple TV 3 1080p | iOS 6.1.4 |
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Marketing two completley different things (visually) as the same thing rarely does well - often times it just leads to consumer confusion when it becomes how obviously different things are.
OSX and iOS share several similarities, but they diverge widely in very fundamental ways as KnighWRX points out. Right now marketing them under different names is the best thing since you can link them as a family of devices. Trying to combine names is only going to lead to headaches when people want to buy a certain device and worry about compatibility. iOS and MacOS are too different to name similarly. That exists on a fundamental level that Apple is very likely not going to change. |
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For the time being, Apple will be one of the major forces moving UNIX to where it needs to go. Check Guarantees? That's a straw man argument. Neither did I say nor did I imply that there are guarantees. That said, Apple has actually doubled-down on UNIX since 2007. Gaining UNIX 03 Certification for Leopard and Snow Leopard were just the tips of icebergs. BTW, UNIX 03 certification is not a "mash-up."
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Neither a borrower nor a lender be For loan oft loses both itself and friend William Shakespeare from Hamlet |
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Windows 8 unifies tablets and laptops. Some may argue the Metro interface isn't great for laptops, and I'm one of them. I think tablets and laptops need separate OSs. I'm not wanting Apple to unify OS X and iOS, or rename them for marketing reasons, but I'd bet money on them doing just that come summer 2013.
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15" MacBook Pro 2GHz i7 4GB 750GB | Mac mini 2.3GHz i7 16GB 1TB Fusion | OS X 10.8.3 iPhone 5 64GB | Apple TV 3 1080p | iOS 6.1.4 |
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But at this point in time, I'm inclined to side with Kilamite. I know that would be a hard reality for most die hard Mac fans. So many of them hate the iOSification of OS X. And from a marketing standpoint I agree that it doesn't make sense to call Lion iOS or to call ML iOS... but the 2013 release of OS X will draw even closer to iOS. iOS is Apple's success, their posterchild. OS X helped put Apple on the map, but in over a decade they have stayed under 7% worldwide marketshare. iOS has exploded in such a way that it surprised even Apple. Now they want to bring that success to the Mac however possible. So first they begin bringing design cues. Then they start bringing the apps and notification center. Next year I think they will add some major cross platform effort which allows iOS and OS X to communicate in such a way that it makes sense to market them both as iOS. They will release at the same time and the upgrades will always remain free Obviously they will still have fundamental differences in how you interact with them and how it functions. But even these will begin to blend and blur throughout the years. In fact I think iCloud will be a huge help to aid the unification of iOS and OS X.
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Now I have a Signature!
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#60 |
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"I don't always use a PC, but when I do, I prefer OSX"
Of course we could always add dos equis and make it OSXX. Last edited by bjm2660; Mar 20, 2012 at 09:50 AM. |
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#61 |
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Hey, these are the jokes people...
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#62 | |
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If we assume that your position is with basis (which we cannot really do) we are talking about massive changes in a short period of time just for the sake of marketing (of which I have no problem with accepting that Apple is good at). Sorry I just don't see that. That sort of change would take a loong time given many different factors. At the core OSX and iOS are the same - but they branch off and differ a great deal - so much so that I don't think that they will ever be the same. |
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#63 | |
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What I mean is that at some point, user interface wise, things will look similar. The Mac will hopefully always have a Finder, though I can imagine it being disabled by default one day. Renaming OS X to iOS will happen when the major features of iOS are on the Mac. We're getting there - Mac App Store, Full Screen apps, Notification Centre, Launch Pad, Multitouch Gestures. Sure, you might have to interact differently with a trackpad than you would with a touchscreen, but the fundamentals are there. The Airport Utility app already looks identical to the iOS app. iCloud login page too. Let me reiterate when I say merge - I mean merge in terms of user interface, like we're already seeing.
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15" MacBook Pro 2GHz i7 4GB 750GB | Mac mini 2.3GHz i7 16GB 1TB Fusion | OS X 10.8.3 iPhone 5 64GB | Apple TV 3 1080p | iOS 6.1.4 |
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And I don't see that happening due to the fact the UI is based on many factors - like input that are just too fundamentally different. I think the differences make any such branding not an ideal situation. I jsut don't see the advantage for Apple - not when they obviously view desktop computing platforms as "trucks".
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Fine, but then stop it with the crap :
There will never be a merge between AppKit/UIKit and Finder/Springboard. Those distinctions will remain as long as the input paradigms remain segregated. ---------- Basically my point, the whole "They are merging!" panic comes from people with no real knowledge of the systems.
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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#66 | ||
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Run iPhoto '11 in fullscreen mode, and you have an iOS user interface. Look at the AirPort Utility app, or the iCloud.com homepage. iLife '12 will no doubt use the iOS interface completely. The aqua era of the Mac interface is going, and iOS is coming in to replace it, and to make that even clearer, Apple will change OS X to iOS. Quote:
The file system on the Mac may be gone in a few years.
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15" MacBook Pro 2GHz i7 4GB 750GB | Mac mini 2.3GHz i7 16GB 1TB Fusion | OS X 10.8.3 iPhone 5 64GB | Apple TV 3 1080p | iOS 6.1.4 |
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#67 | |||
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---------- Quote:
That cue is the good old cursor. You don't need a cursor on iOS. You need a cursor on OS X. Different input paradigms require different UI widgets/controls. Hence, UIKit vs AppKit, Springboard vs Finder. Now you get it ! (Tell me you do so we can stop with the "merge" crap that's already been explained to you ad nauseum). ---------- Quote:
Why ? There's a filesystem on iOS too. Are you mistaking the filesystem for a File Manager now ? You seem to be quite confused.
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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Quote:
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File system viewable to the user, so yes, file manager, Finder.
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15" MacBook Pro 2GHz i7 4GB 750GB | Mac mini 2.3GHz i7 16GB 1TB Fusion | OS X 10.8.3 iPhone 5 64GB | Apple TV 3 1080p | iOS 6.1.4 |
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They're starting to run out of big cats to use, and I doubt they'll use Cougar, so I think we'll see OS X1 within the next several years....I don't think it would be a complete rewrite though...and that's fine because it doesn't have to be.
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Not true. Not even close to true.
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Neither a borrower nor a lender be For loan oft loses both itself and friend William Shakespeare from Hamlet |
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On the merging topic.
First of all, it IS possible to merge the desktop and touch experience. Look at the Windows 8 metro experience. Secondly, I don't believe, and I don't think Kilamite is arguing either, that they will be completely unified in the way that windows 8 does it, but I could easily see Apple wanting to use marketing to bring the success of iOS to the PC realm. They would still have some significant differences. Think of it more like iOS mobile and iOS desktop. I mean even right now the iPad's iOS and iPhone's iOS have some notable differences (less apps on iPad, iPhone has 2 widgets, multitouch gestures on iPad, quick access camera on iPhone, completely rewritten apps, keyboards are different, etc), in that same light I could see the desktop getting an iOS version which is much more unique than iPhone is to iPad, but still yields a similar enough experience so that the average consumer would be able to move easily between the two. Now will the iPad and Mac run all the same executable code? I dunno, probably not. I don't know anything about the nuances of the OS's so it may be difficult to accomplish that, but I also believe that if Apple could devote one team to updating a single every year, it would be much easier than having 2 seperate teams updating 2 seperate OS's every year. Well now hold on here. For big cat species I would say the only possible unused names left are cougar, bobcat and lynx. And cougar has conotations and lynx is like linux. I mean would you really expect Apple to use names like ocelot, margay, colocolo, sunda clouded leopard, fishing cat, and the like? Just seems a bit silly. but in fact, regardless of if Apple begins to market OS X as iOS, I can honestly imagine ML being the last of the big cats. With yearly updates, updating only through the MAS, and (I'm predicting) free updates, there doesn't seem to be much reason to keep the naming scheme going. iOS doesn't need it. It could just be OS X 10.9 or "the new OS X!".
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Now I have a Signature!
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#72 | |||
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That means there's plenty of things you can't do. You have to actually move the cursor for it to be able to send "touches" (activation events in common WIMP parlance). On a touchscreen, I can touch one object at one end of the screen, lift my finger and then touch another unrelated object at the other end. Or both at the same time. Cursor based interfaces and touch based interfaces are functionally and fundamentally different. UIkit vs AppKit, Springboard vs Finder. Ad nauseum until you get it. There's no stopping the truth. Still uses a cursor, still doesn't let me manipulate objects directly as I have no idea where my "finger" or mouse is touching. In fact, what about iPhoto 11 in full screen makes it iOS like ? It's akin to any other photo organizer application I've used in the last 2 decades if anything. Its UI is straight out of the WIMP model, except running in fullscreen mode instead of windowed mode. Quote:
Finder enables certain operations (copy, move, list, delete, cwd) on your disks files through the kernel's VFS layer. It is not a "user viewable" filesystem. ---------- Quote:
That's like the iOS simulator. Sure I can work the springboard with my mouse and the cursor acting like a finger. It sure as heck isn't like running the app on the actual touchscreen though.
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"What you leave behind is not what is engraved in stone monuments, but what is woven into the lives of others." -- Pericles |
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#73 | |
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Although I haven't used windows 8, a good friend of mine (5 times the microsoft fanboy than I am for Apple) said that the metro interface actually works pretty well with a cursor input. Yes there are some different ways of doing the same thing. For example, the touch UI relies a lot of swiping from the edge of the screen, but if you have a cursor the same actions are accomplished by pushing the pointer to the corner of the screen. It just takes a little bit of ingenuity to design, but it can be done to make one UI that can work for touch and pointer. iOS has given Apple 2 opportunities. One for success. And two to restart how an operating system works from the ground up. It was built simply for a phone, but now it is working it's way up and is definitely the future of Apple
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Now I have a Signature!
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#74 |
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My point was the GUI from iOS coming to OS X. iPhoto '11 is an example of that.
Eventually, the appearance of OS X will look like iOS - buttons, menus, fonts. Just because you use your finger with iOS and a mouse with OS X, doesn't mean they can't look the same to some extent. And when OS X does get the general appearance of iOS, Apple might as well call OS X iOS. The user doesn't care about what goes on underneath. If you need to use your finger and interact with objects differently on iOS on the iPad compared to iOS on the Mac, so be it. You seem to be confusing my point with the fact that I think Apple will let you run iOS iPad apps and somehow interact with them using a mouse. I'm not saying that at all. I'm saying Apple will rebrand OS X as iOS, and we'll see a lot of the user interface elements (buttons, fonts etc) look exactly like iOS, as Apple is already doing with their applications and web apps.
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15" MacBook Pro 2GHz i7 4GB 750GB | Mac mini 2.3GHz i7 16GB 1TB Fusion | OS X 10.8.3 iPhone 5 64GB | Apple TV 3 1080p | iOS 6.1.4 |
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*This list does not include alternate names for the same species such as puma, panther, and mountain lion, and catamount. The addition to these four names alone stretches the list to 40. How many other such examples, I don't know.
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Neither a borrower nor a lender be For loan oft loses both itself and friend William Shakespeare from Hamlet |
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