Monte Goulding wrote:
My question would be why is it necessary to ask your users to directly
manipulate files and folders in and around your applications. It's a simple
task to include an interface to abstract the user away from direct file and
folder manipulation. I'd hazard a guess that many windows users don't even
know where their applications are stored let alone want to mess with them.

And yet Photoshop is a best-selling application on Windows as it is on Mac.


We don't have the product managers from all the other vendors who do this here to explain their choices, but perhaps someone at RunRev will answer your question with regard to Rev.

Note that Revolution's components are also outside the bundle as they
are with mine.

Well if rev had all the IDE components in the app bundle it would make standalone building tricky for a start. But that's not a design issue that many of us need to deal with.

But others of us do, and we're no different than RunRev, Microsoft, Adobe, Macromedia, and several dozen other app vendors in terms of how we structure our deliverables.


I think it's nice that we have the option of going both ways, hiding things in bundles for OS X if we choose or structuring things more explicitely, the way Mac Classic and all other operating systems work. Since its possible to structure things both ways there's no need to dictate one or the other, and each has its merits for different kinds of apps.

My question was not whether everyone should deliver every app the same way RunRev, Adobe, and I do. My question was whether the freedom we currently have to use either method could be made easier as well.

--
 Richard Gaskin
 Fourth World Media Corporation
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