And then there's the green maximise which takes over the whole screen, but there's no way to retain windowed mode and just maximise the window screen. You need to use the almost invisible bottom right control... who thought of that?
Yeah, I'm not that keen at all.
It looks flat and dated (OK, retro maybe at a pinch). And it also behaves like it's never been through Beta testing. I mean, go to General preference and change to "graphite". The coloured buttons go grey. Turn it back to "blue" and you get red and yellow blobs back. I mean WTF? Blue gives you red and yellow and green, but not blue?
The level of complaining has reached the point of becoming unreasonable. That much is clear.Appearance does say "For Buttons, Menus, and Windows" though... The close/minimize/fullscreen-maximize grey buttons are just an extra for those who prefer the more sober look of the graphite theme. It's always been like that since the first version of OS X. Default appearance is blue with the 3 colored buttons.
Much of it is aesthetic issues. Why would you expect reason to dominate?The level of complaining has reached the point of becoming unreasonable. That much is clear.
We've reached the point where someone's upset about System Preferences > General saying "Blue" instead of "Blue with red, yellow, green window control buttons". Mind that's been the case since Mac OS X 10.0 Cheetah and nothing new to OS X Yosemite. Call me naive, but I do expect a minimal amount of reason in that regard. I mean, come on. Those stoplight buttons are pretty much OS X' signature. 😛 On top of that "Blue" does give you blue buttons, progress bars and highlight colors. Hence "Blue".Much of it is aesthetic issues. Why would you expect reason to dominate?
option-click the green button will only maximize the window without going full-screen.
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Appearance does say "For Buttons, Menus, and Windows" though... The close/minimize/fullscreen-maximize grey buttons are just an extra for those who prefer the more sober look of the graphite theme. It's always been like that since the first version of OS X. Default appearance is blue with the 3 colored buttons.
Dude, nothing has changed. The Blue appearance ALWAYS came with those stoplight buttons. It's been that way since Mac OS X' initial release in 2001. The general appearance of the buttons, highlights and progress bars are in fact blue. Hence the name "Blue"It was a very first impression. Didn't like the flat cartoony look of it, went to see what options were available and it was like WTF? Graphite = grey, I get that, blue=colours - that makes no sense! And Apple has always made sense.
Yeah, I'm not that keen at all.
It looks flat and dated (OK, retro maybe at a pinch). And it also behaves like it's never been through Beta testing. I mean, go to General preference and change to "graphite". The coloured buttons go grey. Turn it back to "blue" and you get red and yellow blobs back. I mean WTF? Blue gives you red and yellow and green, but not blue?
And then you can scale the display to so small that you can't actually use it.
And then there's the green maximise which takes over the whole screen, but there's no way to retain windowed mode and just maximise the window screen. You need to use the almost invisible bottom right control... who thought of that?
The one thing I do like about Windows 7 was the half-and-half window drag - genius! Apple hasn't implemented any version of that at all, and it's such a productivity booster.
Overall, after my first 20 minutes of Yosemite... Thumbs down.
An exemplary browser: Web
To me, this is close to perfect:
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…
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My first encounter with Web (previously known as Epiphany) was around a week ago, with PC-BSD. Just one criticism of the essence of the app: unless I'm missing a trick, there's no support for bookmarklets.
if that's close to perfection why are you not using Linux already?
… Without focusing on Linux …
… since Apple is openly experimenting with controversial themes that appear to represent some departure from the Mac experience, I should welcome a proper Apple-provided method of allowing third party themes.
I recently tested a variety of desktop environments with PC-BSD. Not for long, but long enough to observe some things that were far more appealing and practical than the constraints of the Yosemite environment.
… Tim Cook reportedly said, in 2012: "The only thing we'll never do is make a crappy product …".
If any minority can demonstrably prove that aspects of a product are significantly crappy, at release time, then such demonstrations will undermine Apple's claims of producing the best.
A slow, gradual undermining should be no more acceptable than a sudden undermining (such as the public response to the introduction of Maps).
If the one million beta testers are gained soon enough, then from amongst that number, I hope that there will be just enough logical feedback, to Apple, for the company to realise that some things must not be forced upon all users of an OS.
Aim for good quality feedback, people. And reproducibility.
… make clear to the viewer/listener why your emotions are naturally high …
PC-BSD is a very smart idea but for me, there's a showstopper. https://alpha.app.net/grahamperrin/post/35418268 if you'd like to continue this conversation with me.
Linux, I could use quite happily – with both ZFS and encryption of my home directory, if those things are easily combined. I'm familiar with Ubuntu but the overall range of distributions is mind-numbing. Next week I'll plan to attend a local LUG meeting; hands-on demonstrations should help me to choose. Any follow-up from me is likely to be in a Linux forum, not in MacRumors.
… I enjoyed the simplicity and sanity of Gnome Web in PC-BSD, here's epiphany on Mavericks viewing pre-release Safari 8 in a MacRumors topic about screenshots of Yosemite:
… Is a document in Safari not a document?
Please consider three of these four windows:
Is what's in front not a window-based view of edition of a document?
… I do not expect all people to understand that titles, at tops of windows, can have value. I ask only that people accept use of titles as one way of working with windows.
Trends are natural, some are good, some not so good. No trend can be perfect for every user of an operating system. I have used Macs for more than a quarter of a decade – long enough to observe and enjoy trends whilst recognising and accepting things that are, to me, imperfect. A quarter of a decade of open mindedness by me and of improvements by Apple. It is extremely rare for something trendy to be forced in a way that makes an app more difficult for me to use.
Yosemite … some exquisite touches alone are not enough … some loss of functionality, the result is alienation of a customer.
… The fervour around Yosemite, I can understand and accept. But beneath the recent fervour, there is a rationale that is demonstrably incomplete. If Apple imagines that all users will fail to notice the flaws in the logic – the incompleteness – Apple is wrong.
Trends that do not make complete sense, bulldozed through … this is not Apple producing the best. It's popularity, at a cost, but it's not the best.
Differences. Responses. Realisations. Yes, yes, yes.
Differences. Options. Appreciation. Yes, yes, yes.
… I suspended judgement. I gave it time. Maybe it would be love at …
… things that will make most sense for a gradual departure from OS X.
… I'll treat that question as
What makes you prefer Mac or Linux?
… Since the appearance of Yosemite has not met my expectations, my vote – too late now – would have been for Linux.
(I also spent a week or so recently testing FreeBSD and PC-BSD on Apple hardware and other hardware … but as Windows is off-topic, so I also treat the other BSDs (and iOS and so on) as OT.)
Why OS X? It took me a few weeks to get close to the cores of my passion for Apple's operating system. I now realise that those core values include a pleasing blend of coherence, consistency, constancy and innovation.
Why Linux? Amongst other things: the option of reasonable support for a storage system/file system that is far superior.
Long-term dissatisfaction with the side-effects of the HFS Plus file system – effects, often hidden, on Mac users in general – became an origin of my long-term preparation for possible abandonment of OS X. February 2014. The tipping point, a decision to gradually abandon OS X, came in July after weeks of growing frustration by the appearance of Yosemite – Apple not blending the four core values in a way that could please me.
Back then, the primary reason for my abandonment of Apple's operating system was described as Apple's abandonment of title bars.
… Will Linux be my 2019/2020 operating system of choice on a summer 2014 Mac? I can't guess …
This is not the most recent topic about Ubuntu, but the opening post is closest to what I'd like to discuss …
To KALLT, or to anyone else with similar viewpoints of both operating systems:
- please, can you steer me to maybe two good summary lists of the tinkering involved?
I guess: one summary of tinkering that's necessary, or close to necessary, for Ubuntu to please someone who enjoys Mavericks and will switch from OS X.
Plus one summary of tinkering that might be desirable (but not absolutely necessary).
If it helps to tailor the steering:
- I'm confident with Terminal and so on
- I currently use a 2009 MacBookPro5,2 with 8 GB memory (the maximum) and an upgraded internal drive (hybrid – SSHD)
- I plan to obtain a new Apple notebook, probably another MacBook Pro with the maximum amount of memory, before Yosemite is released
- I'm already familiar with Ubuntu out-of-the-box (OOTB)
- I plan to use both ZFS on Linux and encryption for my home directory; I'm more than familiar with ZFS on OS X (ZEVO) so I don't expect to need help with this point.
Thanks
(There's no rush for this. I expect my abandonment of OS X to be gradual.)
… nothing in Apple's past had such a ghastly effect on me.
Gobsmacked, puzzled, flabbergasted and ultimately: exasperated. WTF…
I was flabbergasted by Apple's apparent lack of forethought, and occasionally genuinely enraged by the insanity of Yosemite but I gave it time, I gave feedback for maybe six weeks before making the decisions to gradually abandon OS X …
… For me the likeliest approach will be a new MacBook Pro before Yosemite is released, then run Mavericks for as long as is necessary whilst following (and sometimes contributing to) the improvement of non-Apple operating systems.
Initial tinkering with Ubuntu to satisfy a person who will switch from OS X – awaiting answers/discussion.
For its ZFS out-of-the-box, I'm more interested in PC-BSD.
Compared to Gnome 3's Web app, Safari looks pretty much the same
UI changes (..) not because the changes represent best practice, but (...) for the sake of novelty and some 'wow' factor.
Sort of like Compiz*?
look like relics from the 90's IMO. So does PC BSD.
As for the bookmarklets thing, you should do something about that yourself
I agree when you said that Apple need to open their OS up to UI mods. They really do.

THE HOUSE FINALLY HAS INTERNET AND ME AND MY BABY MAC ARE TOGETHER ONCE AGAIN XOXOXO
I recognise the word but don't know what it was/is. (I'm not in a rush to know more, but if you like: aim for one of the less Mac-oriented topics linked from above. Quote a few words then I'll receive notification that you're there.)
I installed all available desktop environments for PC-BSD, not sure whether I delved into all of them. Certainly some of them were intentionally extremely minimalist, those were too geeky for me. A little of what I saw had more wow factor than any version of OS X.
Broadly speaking, I like a GUI to be finely-honed throughout.
I might not use those exact words, but it's certain that one size did not fit all for Yosemite.
happy
