So here’s a nice little Exposé trick that some of you might not have found yet. Press F9 or F10 to show either all the windows you have open or only your current apps windows. Now press TAB to cycle through to the grouped windows of the next app you have open. You can keep pressing TAB to bring each set of app windows into focus. If you know what app you’re after, you can Apple-TAB to bring up the app-switcher and choose it directly. Have you found any nice little bits of functionality yet?
Category: Random
Address Book under OSX has never been a particularly impressive application, but it’s just about worked as a system wide piece of kit. Panther brings with it a number of changes and improvements and a couple of nasty unprovements too. There’s some functionality here that I can’t categorically say wasn’t in Jaguar, so bear with me if I foul something up:
- Every card in Address Book can have a picture associated with it. This is not new. However previously you were just able to pick up a picture and drop it whole onto the hole allocated for it, where it would sit greatly diminished in size and essentially unusable. The version in Panther introduces the lovely resize and crop functionality that’s been in iChat AV since the beta. Very nice indeed;
- The edit functionality now lasts when you change cards which is a good change. Previously editing an card meant entering it individually and clicking on the edit button. Now the edit button will remain depressed until you release it. It’s not the UI approach I’d have taken, but it pretty much works;
- The edit interface itself is a bit of a dog’s dinner. The previously understated and probably not very clear grey + and – buttons have now become garishly red and green, the edit screen radically indents everything and moves stuff around to the extent that it’s difficult to see what’s going on and where your information has been moved to. An approach that highlighted the information rather than the labels might have been better;
- Also noticed for the first time is the ‘send updates’ functionality – which I’m sure has been there for ages. It appears to be a way of informing everyone in your address book of any and all changes to your personal address card. I’m interested, but too scared, to see how this might work…
A post/pre-emptive apology…
I’m hoping to really plough through a lot of ideas in the back of my head this weekend, so please forgive me if they’re not as clear and well-formed as they might otherwise be. All responses gratefully received, all comments appreciated, and I’ll do my best to fix any errors and typos that will inevitably litter everything I write today as I try to throw things out of my head onto the web where they’re both more useful and easier to keep track of. Again – apologies for the incoherent bits and the scrabbling for meaning – I’ll try to do better next time…
First thoughts about Panther…
After a highly enjoyable Panther install party around Mr Webb‘s house, I’m now in a position to give my first impressions of Mac OSX.3. In no particular order (and with no claims made towards total accuracy):
- The new chrome Apple logo that you get when you start up or login to your account is bloody ugly and and tacky and I can’t see what motivated them to use it;
- My spacing between icons is strange and seems absurdly large;
- I can’t use the trackpad to click on the login screen – which is highly annoying;
- Removing the clock application was a strange move, but merging it with the clock in the menu bar and allowing you to choose how to use it makes a certain amount of sense. Having said that, when you switch from digital to analogue view you’re left with a strange shadow box around the analogue face, that seems to be a bug;
- There are a number of occasions where windows appear partly obscured by the top menu bar – this is strange behaviour and confusing, and is hence probably a bug;
- Fast-user switching is well-represented and mostly elegant, although the rotating cube is actually just really funny to watch because it’s so over-the-top;
- The application switcher (Apple-Tab) is beautiful, elegant and well-developed;
- The Font Book application is initially confusing, but is likely to have considerable utility; The redeveloped default font pane is really useful;
- There are a number of strange new interface widgits around the place, including a kind of tiny, almost unnoticeable nubbin that allows you to drag entirely random panes out the side of other panes. This is particularly evident in the Font applications and is extremely strange and clunky. The generic font interface also has some odd rotating knob controls that don’t act quite the way I expected;
- Both modes of the Finder are powerful and mostly functional, but the ‘action’ button is a terrible confusing mistake and both views could have done with more polish and attention to detail. They are – however – much much faster and more responsive as windows, which is much to be applauded;
- Subtle dividers in the top-menu items are extremely elegant, practical and pleasing, but the generally flatter, greyer interface is a bit of a downer;
- Exposé’s controls are in a bit of conflict with some of my illluminated keyboard controls, but that doesn’t matter – it’s a beautiful, elegant and well-presented feature that may take a little one to become habituated with, but is likely to be transformatively useful;
- Mail’s new threading mode is totally incomprehensible;
- Mail is faster, more responsive and more strident than you’d think;
Generally, I’m impressed by the functionality but not impressed by the finish. This one feels half-done – that it wasn’t possible to get it any further down the line before launch date. I have a feeling that over the next few months we’ll see a few patches that resolve 90% of OS’s problems. And when they do – it’s going to be more awesome than ever.
Apologies for down-time…
I’d just like to apologise for the relative lack of posting over the last few days on both plasticbag.org and Everything in Moderation. Looking around me I see a near infinity of “things that need to get done”, very few of which are actually getting done. I’m feeling a little swamped and something’s got to give. At the moment that’s the weblog(s). It’s a shame, though, cos there’s so much going on in my head and otherwise that I’d love to be able to write up in greater detail… Patience!
According to a good friend of mine, I spent a good five minutes in the Warner West End’s first-floor loo with Aaron Caffrey – a (tall, enblondened) nineteen year old who was acquitted sometime in the last few days of crashing Port of Houston computer systems. Of course, being completely out of touch with everything that’s happened in the world since I went down with the flu last week, I didn’t notice at all and looked rather blank at my friend while he explained the whole situation to me. Young Katy seemed vaguely clued up on the whole thing too. I am – it seems – out of touch.
Anyway, I can report that at no time during our lavatory-time together did Aaron attempt to break into my systems, that he does indeed fit the stereotype remarkably well and that – in unrelated news – that League of Extraordinary Gentlemen is a tedious, unexceptional, bland and irritating adaptation of the Alan Moore / Kevin O’Neill comic book and that I very much don’t recommend it.
Addendum: For those of you actually looking for useful links about Aaron, you might do better here:
Found objects: Social Software Mind-map…
I’ve not got an awful lot to say about this this fantastically interesting mind-map of social software, but I think it’s slightly too important and interesting to be left loitering in the linklog.
On stealing authenticity…
So I’m sitting at my new Powerbook watching The Man of Law’s Tale when Cameron Marlow IM’s me to say that he’s in this conference watching a paper called, Visual Factors In Constructing Authenticity In Weblogs and they’ve just started citing the design of my site. It would probably be disingenuous of me to say that I just ripped off kottke, although when I first showed it to him, he did think it was a joke. Sigh. Anyway, it looks like an interesting paper:
The emergence of weblogs as contributing to the public sphere has returned concerns about authenticity in renewed form: readers who encounter weblogs must construct some basis of trust in the content and the subjectivity represented there in textual form. Many sources of authenticity are largely verbal (mutual citations, ideological coherence, recognized links, ease of access, ranking on index sites). Beyond these, however, there are visual cues which tend to promote confidence: these visual cues are more easily overlooked but nonetheless important in establishing the writersí credibility.
Where's the Powerbook?
Ack! My baby’s in London. But when will it arrive in my hands?!
Date | Time | Location | Status |
16 Oct 2003 | 07:37 | London City | Import Received |
16 Oct 2003 | 04:46 | London Stansted Airport | Consignment Received At Transit Point |
15 Oct 2003 | 22:25 | Brussels Hub | Consignment Received At Transit Point |
15 Oct 2003 | 09:35 | Brussels Hub | Consignment Received At Transit Point |
14 Oct 2003 | 21:07 | Luxembourg | Shipped From Originating Depot |
On The Emperor's Animals…
So here’s a concept for a new Typepad weblog, inspired by the quirky and immensely pleasing post categories on a friend’s weblog. The concept is called The Emperor’s Animals and is basically a collection of funny animal links and stories from around the web. The site is designed to resemble 18th/19th Century illustrated guide to fabulous beasts and uses as post categories the The Celestial Emporium of Benevolent Knowledge typology of animals outlined in Jorge Luis Borges’ The Analytical Language of John Wilkins. Please please will someone make this. I’d read it every day! Just in case you don’t know them off-by-heart already, these categories are:
- belonging to the Emperor
- embalmed
- trained
- pigs
- sirens
- fabulous
- stray dogs
- included in this classification
- trembling like crazy
- innumerable
- drawn with a very fine camelhair brush
- et cetera
- just broke the vase
- from a distance look like flies