Leopard, first impressions
Today I finally decided to upgrade to Mac OS X Leopard. I know, I'm late to the party as usual, but in this case I wanted to wait until most of the wrinkles were ironed out.
My first impressions are... mixed.
I like the fact that I could upgrade from Tiger without much hassle. Everything still seems to work, including QuickSilver, Adium, Chicken, and Postgres. Most of my settings (like e.g. for Terminal) are preserved as well.
There were, however, a few changes that immediately stood out, and that I didn't like at all.
The new look of the dock is one of them. Fortunately, I knew this beforehand, and it's easily fixed.
I don't like the translucent menu bar either, but again, nothing a bit of poking around can't fix. :-)
X11 still doesn't work (I normally would not use this at all, except that there's a C64 emulator that depends on it). There are some articles that deal with this problem, I will have to look into that.
Something I haven't found a fix for (so far), and which bugs the hell out of me, is the new behavior of the little "view" icons in Finder windows. There are four of them now, and you can change a window's setting to use icon view, list view, columns, or Cover Flow. Great, except changing a view for one window means changing it *for all windows*.
In other words, let's say my default view is icons. I go to folder A, which has a lot of documents, so I want to change it to list view. I click on the icon, then open folder B. Surprise! It's in list view now too, and so are all other windows on your system.
Now, it's not completely impossible to change this and set views on a per-window basis, but it's so clumsy that you might as well forget it. In order to use icon view as the default, but use list view for folder A, I have to do the following:
- Open folder A.
- Press ⌘J to open the "Show View Options" dialog.
- In the window for folder A, click the "list view" icon.
- In the "Show View Options" dialog, now check the "Always open in list view" option. (Notice that this will initially show whichever view is the default, so it starts out as "Always open in icon view".)
- Open folder B (this can be any folder that does not have custom settings associated with it). You'll notice it's in list view too now.
- In the window for folder B, click the "icon view" icon.
This is pretty lame, IMHO... unless I'm misunderstanding things, it was *much* easier to do this in Tiger and its precursors. So far, from what I've read online, this indeed seems to be the new behavior: "Leopard also has new logic for views. Unless you've ticked the option to open in icon view, all windows will show whatever view you have just selected in whatever window. Like it or not, that's the way it is." [link]
(Strangely enough, other options like colored backgrounds, seem to be automatically on a per-window basis.)
More impressions will follow as I continue to work with the system. I haven't checked out the shiny new features yet (Time Machine, Spaces, etc). More about that later...
Philipp von Weitershausen said,
July 19, 2008 @ 9:02 pm
Hey Hans,
when I upgraded to Leopard I had no problems. Then again, I wiped my disk and installed from scratch. However, I recently upgraded the Tiger installation on my parents' Macs and X11 would no longer work on both machines. Doing the trick described at http://forums.macosxhints.com/showthread.php?t=81559 worked for me (replacing org.x.X11.plist with a newer version).
Good luck!
Philipp
P.S.: The new dock and menu bar were pretty much the first things that I changed back as well. There are nice things to say about Leopard, though. Spotlight has become very fast. I no longer use QuickSilver to launch programs, like I did on Tiger.
CaptSolo said,
July 21, 2008 @ 6:26 pm
I had a similar experience. After upgrading to Leopard quite recently I am getting my system "back to normal" and trying to get used to some of the new features.
One of those is Spaces which looks nice but is not very reliable in that sometimes it switches workspace and sometimes it does not. Maybe it is too early to be useful and users need to find some 3rd party replacement for it.
The suggestion that helped me with the X11 problem was to install the latest X11.pkg from http://xquartz.macosforge.org/.