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rainbowizard

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Feb 10, 2009
21
0
iMac, Mavericks, is missing the Time Machine animation in Menu Bar, the icon is there, it no longer annimates by going round and round while it is updating. I can't tell when it is backing up unless I enter System Preferences, Time Machine. Worked fine in ML. Is this a Mavericks glitch that will be fixed? or is there a terminal fix.
 

wrldwzrd89

macrumors G5
Jun 6, 2003
12,110
77
Solon, OH
iMac, Mavericks, is missing the Time Machine animation in Menu Bar, the icon is there, it no longer annimates by going round and round while it is updating. I can't tell when it is backing up unless I enter System Preferences, Time Machine. Worked fine in ML. Is this a Mavericks glitch that will be fixed? or is there a terminal fix.
No. It's deliberately done that way - I assume the reason is to save energy, like so many other things in Mavericks.
 

FreakinEurekan

macrumors 603
Sep 8, 2011
5,585
2,631
I can't tell when it is backing up

When it's backing up, there's an extra arrowhead at about 8:00 position:
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LCD

macrumors member
Dec 28, 2012
81
1
USA
iMac, Mavericks, is missing the Time Machine animation in Menu Bar, the icon is there, it no longer annimates by going round and round while it is updating. I can't tell when it is backing up unless I enter System Preferences, Time Machine. Worked fine in ML. Is this a Mavericks glitch that will be fixed? or is there a terminal fix.

In the sidebar of a Finder window you can still see a circular arrow moving counterclockwise next to the device you're using with Time Machine as long as the box is checked in the Sidebar pane of Finder Preferences to show that kind of device in the sidebar.
 

scaredpoet

macrumors 604
Apr 6, 2007
6,627
342
It was more likely done for aesthetic reasons. I like the change. It always seemed a little bit goofy to have this clock icon spinning around in my menu bar.
 

Bear

macrumors G3
Jul 23, 2002
8,088
5
Sol III - Terra
It was more likely done for aesthetic reasons. I like the change. It always seemed a little bit goofy to have this clock icon spinning around in my menu bar.
It was nice having a visual notification that Time Machine was doing its thing. The extra arrowhead doesn't seem like it would be that noticeable to me.
 

priitv8

macrumors 601
Jan 13, 2011
4,038
641
Estonia
To save energy? Seriously??? Come on. It doesn't take much energy to spin an icon clockwise.
Yes but you're missing the big picture: every little bit counts. They've ditched all unnecessary screen updates. That's the same philosophy not to update hidden regions eg in Safari. Not to act on every timer tick, but to coalesce them into groups and run in packs.
Taken together all these little changes account towards better battery life under Mavericks.
 
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maflynn

macrumors Haswell
May 3, 2009
73,497
43,424
Yes but you're missing the big picture: every little bit counts. They've ditched all unnecessary screen updates.
I wouldn't qualify it as unnecessary - I think the spinning icon was very useful and have it missing only reduces my user experience.

FWIW, the see a spinning circle on my finder sidebar window when TM is running, so they have it there but not the menu bar?
 
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Weaselboy

Moderator
Staff member
Jan 23, 2005
34,138
15,604
California
Right, but did you notice it has to spin counter-clockwise, much more difficult.:rolleyes:

They should make it spin clockwise one time, then counter clockwise the next so it does not use any power at all. :D

I preferred the spinner myself also.
 

BenTrovato

macrumors 68040
Jun 29, 2012
3,035
2,198
Canada
I liked the spinner because I like to know what's going on all the time. But now that I think about it, the double arrow is much better. Who cares when time machine is backing up, it's a useless notification. It's not like I need to know when it backs up (way too often anyway) and that prompts me to take a different action. If my usage doesn't change when something is happening then why would I want to be notified?

Nevertheless, there should be an option for that so people with ocd can enable the clockwise animation :)
 

whsbuss

macrumors 601
May 4, 2010
4,183
1,043
SE Penna.
I liked the spinner because I like to know what's going on all the time. But now that I think about it, the double arrow is much better. Who cares when time machine is backing up, it's a useless notification. It's not like I need to know when it backs up (way too often anyway) and that prompts me to take a different action. If my usage doesn't change when something is happening then why would I want to be notified?

Nevertheless, there should be an option for that so people with ocd can enable the clockwise animation :)

To each his own..... using my MBP I'd like to know when time machine is doing a backup. I've had a few times where I closed the lid while and the next time machine backup failed b/c of a corrupted sparse bundle.
 

priitv8

macrumors 601
Jan 13, 2011
4,038
641
Estonia
Probably you missed the fact, that the spinning of arrow was reduced already in 10.8.
Up to 10.7 it started spinning immediately at the start of backup preparation. In 10.8 it remained stationary for the whole preparation and cleanup period and spinned only during the actual backup.
 

bobr1952

macrumors 68020
Jan 21, 2008
2,040
39
Melbourne, FL
I was pretty used to the spinning icon too but have adjusted just fine to the difference between backing up and not backing up. It is a subtle icon change but not that hard to pick out once you get used to it.
 

Panu

macrumors regular
Mar 31, 2005
102
0
Virginia suburbs of DC
Yes but you're missing the big picture: every little bit counts. They've ditched all unnecessary screen updates. That's the same philosophy not to update hidden regions eg in Safari. Not to act on every timer tick, but to coalesce them into groups and run in packs.
Taken together all these little changes account towards better battery life under Mavericks.

Close, but no cigar; but then you probably don't smoke anyway. As you can see by iOS 7, and the changes they've threatened us with in the next version of OS X, they are ditching all unnecessary beauty.
 

smirk

macrumors 6502a
Jul 18, 2002
691
54
Orange County, CA
I liked the spinner because I like to know what's going on all the time. But now that I think about it, the double arrow is much better. Who cares when time machine is backing up, it's a useless notification. It's not like I need to know when it backs up (way too often anyway) and that prompts me to take a different action. If my usage doesn't change when something is happening then why would I want to be notified?

I've had my Time Machine archive corrupted too many times by putting the computer to sleep while it was being backed up. For me, the spinning icon is a useful way to know when it's safe to sleep.
 

chabig

macrumors G4
Sep 6, 2002
11,260
8,958
It was nice having a visual notification that Time Machine was doing its thing. The extra arrowhead doesn't seem like it would be that noticeable to me.

In the tech past, most computers had LEDs that blinked every time the hard drive was accessed. I think Apple led the industry in getting rid of these. It's of no importance to the user. I view the TM icon in the same light. Just let it do its thing. You don't have to babysit it.
 

dalesmith

macrumors newbie
May 24, 2014
3
0
In the tech past, most computers had LEDs that blinked every time the hard drive was accessed. I think Apple led the industry in getting rid of these. It's of no importance to the user. I view the TM icon in the same light. Just let it do its thing. You don't have to babysit it.

No need to babysit it, but it is nice to know at a glance that a backup is in progress. I recently shut off by MacBook Pro while a TM backup of 1.3 GB was 99% complete. After restarting my computer, I restarted the backup and it had to start copying the entire 1.3 GB over again. As a result the time and CPU cycles spend backing up the 1.2 GB was completely wasted.

At the least, the TM icon could be changed to a static RED version of the normally black icon when backing up.
 

Nermal

Moderator
Staff member
Dec 7, 2002
20,644
4,044
New Zealand
Red looks like an error, so I wouldn't suggest that :)

I do miss the colourful icons from earlier OS versions though!
 

dalesmith

macrumors newbie
May 24, 2014
3
0
Red looks like an error, so I wouldn't suggest that :)

I do miss the colourful icons from earlier OS versions though!

There are other menu bar icons (e.g. OmniFocus) that have red icons in non-error conditions. Hell, the iPhone and iPad are full of icons with red badges on them that do not indicate an error. Nonetheless, Apple could add a preference setting to allow the user to pick his/her preferred color for the active TM icon.
 

PReinie

macrumors newbie
Jan 21, 2012
8
0
Northbrook IL
Apple hasn't for umpteen years!

"Apple could add a preference setting to allow the user to pick his/her preferred color for the active TM icon."

dalesmith - I've been waiting for that since Leopard if not before. Even Windoze 2000 (if not before) allowed the border of a window to be modified. X-windows (Unix) was even better. It is so hard to tell the difference between the active OSX window and the other in-active ones (the ones without focus) due to the light grey versus slightly darker grey.

I too liked the movement in the bar, but I can live with the "triangle" at 8:00. Making the icon color selectable would be great, even if it's just the triangle.

As far as saving on battery/CPU time, etc, why then have the spinning icon in Finder, which I often have open? It doesn't even reflect the icon in the menu bar.

(Even worse, I don't like the grey dock.)

Oh well. My Mac is a hand-down from my son. There are advantages and disadvantages to all "tools". I'm not really into computers for "the experience", to me they're tools.
 

Emmett Kelly

macrumors newbie
Oct 27, 2003
1
0
North America
Missing the big picture?

Yes but you're missing the big picture: every little bit counts. They've ditched all unnecessary screen updates. That's the same philosophy not to update hidden regions eg in Safari. Not to act on every timer tick, but to coalesce them into groups and run in packs.
Taken together all these little changes account towards better battery life under Mavericks.

BIG PICTURE??? It's a very small picture, actually - one that didn't need changing. If Apple was concerned about Energy, they could stop pushing those annoying multiple-times-a-day pop-ups announcing there is new software available and do we want to install it now, be reminded later, in an hour or tomorrow.

And when you hit your mid-forties, you won't notice the change in battery life, but you'll be asking Apple for an on screen alert or some kind of beep to let you know when Time Machine or whatever it morphs into is running because you'll have a harder time seeing that little arrow than you do now.

Wonder why so many people missed it? They must have been distracted by the thrill of extra battery life....
 

chabig

macrumors G4
Sep 6, 2002
11,260
8,958
You're not supposed to need to know when Time Machine is working. No user intervention is required.
 

priitv8

macrumors 601
Jan 13, 2011
4,038
641
Estonia
You're not supposed to need to know when Time Machine is working. No user intervention is required.
I agree. Doesn't bother me either. And if TM fails to back up, I can see it immediately from a different status bar icon. Then it's time to intervene.
 
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