TIDBITS: Leopard Wish List

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This article is by TidBITS Staff, originally published in TidBITS#842/14-Aug-06

When he introduced Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard on stage during last week’s Worldwide Developer Conference keynote, Steve Jobs was clear about how there were more “top secret” features coming in Leopard. That got us thinking - given what Apple has done in previous versions of Mac OS X, and what they’ve announced for Leopard, what’s left? What improvements to Mac OS X remain for the picking? After some discussions among the staff, we came up with this list. (And if you’re interested in hearing more about what Jobs did talk about in Leopard, check out the last two MacNotables podcasts, one a panel discussion[38] with Dan Frakes, Ted Landau, Bob LeVitus, and Andy Ihnatko, and the other a solo show with Adam[39].)

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**Faster Faster, Pussycat!** Put bluntly, the overall Mac OS X user experience is still too slow. Throwing hardware at the problem helps to a certain extent, but working in the Finder and switching among multiple different applications involves far too many pauses. The spinning pizza of death is a sufficiently common occurrence that we find ourselves distractedly switching applications merely to keep working, although it’s nice that the colored wheel is less commonly an indicator that a restart will be required in the near future. We’d like to see significant attention paid in Leopard to performance in areas that will provide perceptual speed differences to every Mac user with sufficiently modern hardware. New features are great, and we understand the need to justify the selling price of a new version, but fine-tuning what’s already implemented not only provides a boost in everyday activities, it makes sense when looking ahead to future revisions.


**Smarter Finder**—Speaking of the Finder, rumor has it that Apple is working on it for Leopard, and we have some pet peeves we’d love to see addressed beyond performance. There are still times the Finder doesn’t notice new files appearing, which is confusing at best, and its warning when you’re copying multiple files over files with the same names really needs the chronological information available when copying a single file over an identically named item. Other complaints include the default button when changing the extension of a file’s name (if you’re changing the extension, in most cases you probably intend to change it, so that should be the default); the way the Finder selects the original file after you duplicate it, rather than the copy that you probably want to work on; the tendency of a folder to be scrolled out of sight when you rename it; and the way the Show Original contextual menu command doesn’t always (if ever) select an alias’s original file. Apple could do worse than to study Cocoatech’s Path Finder[40] for hints on how to address these and other small usability problems with the Finder.

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Posted by Jake Covert on 8/16/2006, early morning

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