If you long for those days, well, nobody is stopping you from using one.
At 12:58 PM 7/26/2014, you wrote:
I never used one of those. I've held one and checked one out,
but never got the hang of them.
I have a friend who has an Apple 2E with a lot of his original
accessories and disks. He fires that puppy up from time to time
for nostalgia sake.
Take Care
John D. Panarese
Director
Mac for the Blind
Tel, (631) 724-4479
Email, [email protected]
Website, http://www.macfortheblind.com
APPLE CERTIFIED SUPPORT PROFESSIONAL FOR MAC OSX 10.7 LION and 10.8
Mountain Lion
AUTHORIZED APPLE STORE BUSINESS AFFILIATE
MAC and iOS VOICEOVER TRAINING AND SUPPORT
On Jul 26, 2014, at 11:57 AM, Barry Hadder <[email protected]> wrote:
> I long for the days of the abacus.
>
> On Jul 26, 2014, at 10:35 AM, John Panarese <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> The reality is, you are going to find problems with any version
of an operating system. Look at the Windows users who still stick
with XP at this point. There are oddities that one person may have
that cannot be recreated by another person with any version of an
OS. That is just the unfortunate aspect of computers, even within
Mac systems. Personally, going back to Snow Leopard? Are you
crazy? Anyone who says that has not used each of the operating
systems extensively as they have progressed from Tiger. VoiceOver
has come a long way since 10.4, and since I still have a Snow
Leopard install available to me, as well as a Leopard one, I can
tell you that you are not missing anything significant. I have to
work with a lady who is still running Snow Leopard and it's seems
antiquated to me when I use it. It's like night and day compared
to VoiceOver in Mavericks. I'd take Mavericks over Tiger, Leopard,
Snow Leopard or anything else. There are considerable technical
differences and advances as well that go beyond VoiceOver. You are
drastically understating things if you are pining for the days of Snow Leopard.
>
>
> Take Care
>
> John D. Panarese
> Director
> Mac for the Blind
> Tel, (631) 724-4479
> Email, [email protected]
> Website, http://www.macfortheblind.com
>
> APPLE CERTIFIED SUPPORT PROFESSIONAL FOR MAC OSX 10.7 LION and
10.8 Mountain Lion
>
> AUTHORIZED APPLE STORE BUSINESS AFFILIATE
>
> MAC and iOS VOICEOVER TRAINING AND SUPPORT
>
>
>
>
> On Jul 26, 2014, at 10:01 AM, Brandon A. Olivares
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I don't see what is wrong with Mavericks. It's been working
absolutely fine for me.
>>
>> Any issues I had was because my computer was old. I just got a
new Macbook Pro, and now it runs smoothly. It's been perfectly solid.
>>
>> ---
>> Peace,
>> Brandon
>>
>> Awaken To Silence: Awaken To The Silence That Has Always Been Within You
>>
>> Facebook: AwakenToSilence
>> Twitter: @awakentosilence
>> Tumblr: awakentosilence.tumblr.com
>>
>> On Jul 26, 2014, at 3:51 AM, Christopher Hallsworth
<[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Very true in that newer is not always better. My mac came
preinstalled with Lion so I could go back to it if I really wanted
to using Internet Recovery. I could also reinstall Mountain Lion by
downloading it from the Mac App Store. Guess it's each to their own
but since my mac is not my primary machine I don't mind upgrading
and living the possible consequences.
>>>
>>> On 25/07/2014 23:34, Sabahattin Gucukoglu wrote:
>>>> Warning: whiny rant ahead.
>>>>
>>>> I made the mistake of reinstalling Snow Leopard on one of my
older machines that supported it. I also learned that my desktop
iMac originally came with it, and that although difficult, I could
choose to use it. This would still be preferable to going back to Windows.
>>>>
>>>> I say "Mistake" because using Snow Leopard again, even for a
short while, made me realise just how stupid and pointless all
subsequent releases of OS X have been. I mean, really, it's just
gimmicks and iOS envy. The small number of worthwhile features
that came with newer OS releases could easily have been foregone or
substituted if it meant getting back what I most liked about a
clean, stable, functional OS like Snow Leopard. How could I have
upgraded three OS releases and not noticed that? I guess the
"Magic" of Apple is really that they can convince people to accept
unwelcome change, even for some trifling little benefit which they
will sell as a "Feature" to justify an entire OS upgrade.
>>>>
>>>> So, to answer your question, the reason to install ML over
Mavericks is that newer is not always better, but that ML is a good
bit more stable and comes from a better cut. However, I do
recommend it in this instance, because Apple has abandoned
accessibility support for ML, and you won't get system software
updates that address any accessibility issues. I know; I
asked. There are a couple of minor changes in Mavericks besides
that make it worth having, like invisible Time Machine backups, and
multi-process Safari. However, you'll have to learn how to work
the new iBooks, if you need it, and there are definite stability issues.
>>>>
>>>> /me wonders if he should install Snow Leopard on my primary
desktop, and live forever in a better time ...
>>>>
>>>> No, probably not. I would only hurt myself in the long run.
>>>>
>>>> Yes, I saw the latest Yosemite, in case anyone's
wondering. I'm not telling you what to expect, but you can sign up
for the beta for free.
>>>>
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> Sabahattin
>>>>
>>>
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>>
>>
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>
> --
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> Barry Hadder
> [email protected]
>
>
>
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