Gadolie said:I was wondering if anybody can tell me why sometimes the spinning beach ball spins and sometime the wristwatch spins. I wonder if when the ball spins, the system is under more stress. Sometimes I get no spins of any kind 😕
Thank you
G5 1.8 dualie
Hmm... I don't know why this happens, but I suspect the wristwatch appears when a Mac OS X application that can also run in the Classic environment (so-called "CFM Carbon" application) or a Classic application is busy. Other types of Mac OS X applications (that don't work in Classic - "Mach-O Carbon" and "Cocoa") will display the beach ball instead because they take full advantage of the Mac OS X frameworks. That's my best guess. As far as why you get no spins sometimes - it's because the application in question is either in the background or forgot to set the cursor status to "busy".Gadolie said:I was wondering if anybody can tell me why sometimes the spinning beach ball spins and sometime the wristwatch spins. I wonder if when the ball spins, the system is under more stress. Sometimes I get no spins of any kind 😕
Thank you
G5 1.8 dualie
yellow said:I'm pretty sure that wrldwzrd89 is right. Carbonized apps versus cocoa apps. You'll never see a wristwatch with Safari or other iApps. Only with carbonized apps.
Grokgod said:I have osx panther installed without Classic and sometimes i get the wristwatch!
Brize said:I get the wristwatch whenever I add artwork to an album in iTunes and one of the tracks is playing. Now I'm beginning to wonder whether this represents unusual behaviour
yellow said:Yes, well, I may have mislead you there.. You may, or may not, remember that iTunes was an app that originally came into being in OS9, so it could be a carbonized app. Though by now I would fully have expected iTunes to be full Coccoa.