That's as good an explanation as I have heard. It makes sense. Too bad Jobs doesn't have a wife with GUI design skills to give him a boot in the butt occasionally ... a little personal democracy .... :)

db


mike wrote:
Well Apple is not a democracy, which is it's greatest strength and
weakness.  It comes down to the single vision of one man and sometimes that 
will have a bad effect, luckily for Apple it usually has a very good effect, 
but does make change hard if weaknesses are found and Jobs doesn't see them as 
weaknesses.  The original iPhone far out paced any competitor on the market for 
a couple years and now with android coming in with similiar interfaces, 
building on the good and getting rid of some of the weaknesses, Apple has some 
competition to look at.  A huge factor for most people I know
would be if Apple allowed multitasking, that would be huge, it's clear from 
windows phones and android phones it's not a battery issue, so we shall see if 
Apple addresses this.  The iPhone has largely remained unchanged since it came 
out, with it's strong app base this may not matter to some or most users, time 
will tell.

On Wed, Dec 23, 2009 at 12:03 PM, db <[email protected]> wrote:

Or they might just stick with their home screen like they have stuck with
OSX's surprisingly limited functionality finder/dock system for such a long
time  ...

Like Apple computers there is more to the iPhone then their Home screen.
The collective good will make particular weaknesses bearable for most.

But it begs the question ... why not fix the weaknesses? ... which is where
this string started.

db




mike wrote:

I found it annoying to hide the dock myself, although I found it worked
just
fine at the bottom.  I always made it as small as I could and still see it
and let it grow rather large when I wanted it.  It's interesting to note
about showing you information in the dock, this is one of the complaints
on
the iphone that you have to open an app to find out just about anything.
 On
Androids home screen you can find out weather, the content of a new sms,
an
IM, stock quotes, full calender etc  Almost everything can be found out
from
the home screen of an android phone without opening any apps...I'm anxious
to see where Apple takes the iPhone OS since it's first iteration was so
simple and groundbreaking.  Will they [ever] overhaul it and bring more
functionality to the home screen?  If it was MS I'd say they are just
going
to copy someone who does it better...but being Apple they might look at
the
better on Android and scratch it and go some other direction that just ups
the ante.

On Tue, Dec 22, 2009 at 8:00 PM, tjpa <[email protected]> wrote:



On Dec 22, 2009, at 11:29 AM, Allen Firstenberg wrote:



When I first started using OSX, I tried moving the dock around and
trying
different hide settings and never quite liked it.  Lots of my windows
put
stuff on the left, and having the dock there would cover it.  Setting it
to
auto hide would have it slow to return when I did want it.



I suspect that hiding the Dock may be the reason some hate the Dock. It
does not work as well when hidden. On my screen the dock is just 1/2 inch
wide and holds 46 icons. I don't see any problem with giving up that
space.
I slide all the program windows over by that half inch and most apps
remember that position. The dock is not just a program launcher, but also
provides information about the state of the computer. The iCal icon even
changes to show me the date. When I want to email a file I drag it into
the
Mail icon. To edit a file I drag it into the icon of the app I want to
use,
which will vary with what I'm doing. Hiding the Dock would deprive me of
much functionality and slow me down. I would first have to drag a file to
the edge to display the Dock, then scan for the app's icon, and then make
another trip to the icon's location. With the Dock always visible I can
scan
for the icon at the same time as I drag the file over to the Dock. It is
one
seamless motion. Very fast.



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