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p.10 #7 · I think i'm going to buy a windows 8 tablet | |
Tomser wrote:
Good points, and I've been suffering through all of that myself .
The early OSXs might or might not have been slow, but the hardware certainly wasn't up to it .
10.0.0 on a G3 - you needed the patience of a saint.
The G5 towers were doing ok, but the Intel machines were a revelation .
As for the current state, if the latest hardware ran on 10.6, I'd agree it'd be the best ever, and very competitive .
Personally, I found 10.1 on the G3 to be quite usable (10.0 wasn't, but Apple fixed that pretty quickly) as long as you had enough RAM, but I had 1GB in my B&W G3, an upgrade from the 768MB that my Beige G3 had, and which I also ran OS X on. If you really want to experience how slow OS X can be, try NeXTSTEP on a Colorslab with 8MB of RAM. That was entertaining, I had a Monoslab and a Colorslab for a while as toys. Nice machines, but while the OS was nicely polished (Most of the issues with early OS X versions were related to the architecture port and the Macification of the UI compared to the much less Mac-like OpenSTEP/NeXTSTEP which it evolved out of), the NeXT hardware was never as well designed as what Apple would come up with later.
That said, I've always been multiplatform. Got my start on PC's, but had a number of Mac's starting in 1996, mostly ones that were somewhat older (my first Mac was a IIsi, followed by a PowerBook 170). I've actually just started using OS X as a primary OS again after 6 years, when I replaced my eMac with a PC. Overall I like OS X, but I find the IOS additions (LaunchPad and Mission Control, as well as the App Store) to be much less useful and refined than Metro on Win8, I've a marginal preference for OS X over Vista/7 otherwise, despite a few other niggles (I'm not a fan of the Dock overall, especially in how poorly it indicates running applications and Finder remains a UI disaster, as it has been ever since Public Beta. But I generally like the UI otherwise and being a longtime Unix user, Terminal is a lot more comfortable to me than PowerShell.
I agree though that 10.6 seems to have been the peak for OS X of late. There were just too many poor UI changes in Lion (Natural Scrolling, Ugh, it isn't natural on a trackpad, only on a touchscreen)
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