Another useful feature is gone missing in Leopard

Leopard, Rant, Software Review 3 Comments

Yet another useful feature has been eliminated in Leopard.

The audio controller that the Finder’s column view had for the preview pane when previewing audio files has been eliminated. Why? I don’t know. No logical explanation can come to mind.

Audio ControllerIn Tiger, if you set your window’s view to the column view and point it to a folder that has MP3 files, when you select one of those files, the right-most column shows a controller that allows you to play the audio file, select the point where you want the play head to be and control the playback’s volume. Leopard: NO MORE!

Leopard’s music controllerWhat you get in Leopard is a silly, YouTube-like preview square with a big ‘play’ button in its middle. No volume control and no skipping ahead. You can always hit the space bar to get a big window showing iTunes like display, and you can skip ahead, but you still can’t control the volume.

Somebody should tell Apple’s engineers that an UPGRADE is when you make things better, not worse.

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Leopard 10.5.0 problem spots

Leopard, Software Review 8 Comments

I’ve been using Leopard as my only OS for 4+ days now. Here is a first report on where I’ve encountered the most problems.

Safari:

I spend a lot of time with Safari (can’t use any other browser as my main browser). It’s the only Apple application that I use so extensively. So far I’ve noticed few thing:

  1. It crashes way more than previous versions of Safari. I guess they’re using a code-base almost completely different from the beta 3.0 version that they released for Tiger. The beta Tiger version was almost bulletproof for me. I’ve had unexplained crashes so far at least twice per day. Most of the crashes happened when I started typing in a form.
  2. It seems to be unable to block certain type of popup windows. I have the ‘Block pop up windows’ preference set, and yet I’ve had two or three instances where websites managed to show me some ads in a popup window. Not good.
  3. Visual glitches: A site I visited changed the size of my main Safari window to a really small size and then back to full-screen. After the expansion to full size, the tabs bar got clipped and only a third of its normal hight showed. I couldn’t get it back to normal size without quitting Safari. (side note: I wish Safari had a resize blocking feature like Camino. I just hate it when a stupid website decides that my window size is not adequate for its display and ‘helps’ me by changing the size of my browser window).
  4. Scripting: Apple changed the behavior of some AppleScript commands. The ‘open’ command used to open a new window with the URL, now it opens it in a tab. The kicker is that Safari doesn’t seem to respond to ‘make new window’ command. (I’ve worked around this one by modifying my code to anticipate a new tab instead of a new window and acts accordingly.)
  5. Spontaneous cookie loss: It has happened few times already. I would be surfing and managing my various websites, (most of my websites rely on cookies for log in), and suddenly, I would be logged out. I looked over cookies and most of the cookies weren’t there. They simply vanished. Not all cookies, just some. I have no clue how to track this bug.
  6. Web clippings don’t work: I’ve tested the Web Clip feature and it doesn’t seem to work. When I make a clip of a page, it appears correctly in Dashboard, but whenever I reload the Dashboard, the clip is empty. I tried it with various sites with the same result.

Folder Actions:

To show my geeky side, one of Leopard’s features that I anticipated the most is the enhancements to the Folder Actions engine. In Tiger, if you had multiple folders with folder actions, those actions don’t run concurrently. They run back to back. So if folder 1 fires its action and it takes a while to complete, folder 2 won’t fire its action until folder 1’s action ends. Leopard’s feature list promised to fix this.

However, not only they didn’t fix it, a bug seems to have broken Folder Actions further. Now, even if I have multiple folders with folder actions set up, only the first active one works. All the other ones don’t work at all. So now I have to choose which folder action I can live without and which ones are too crucial.

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Leopard second impression

Leopard, Software Review Be the first to Comment

Well, after my first attempt at installing Leopard by doing a normal ‘Update’ on the previous system, I couldn’t get the Finder to respond, no matter what I did.

I changed strategy and re-installed by doing an ‘Erase and Install’.

‘Erase and install’ worked perfectly.

It took about 45 minutes to install from scratch, excluding all printer drivers. I don’t use the laptop for anything other than managing the site, internet access and email while on the road; so printing is not needed at all. That saves nearly 3 GB of hard disk space.

After that I went through the step by step setup and created my user account and internet setup. Everything went smoothly. Setting the system’s preferences to my own settings took about 20 minutes.

My main reason for this test install is to test if my site management software works with the new system. Great news for me, it works flawlessly.

I performed few tests. In each instance my software downloaded and extracted submissions; formatted them and re-uploaded them to the server. So from that point of view, my mind is at ease with regards to leopard. Everything else on my system is not crucial. Even if there were some bugs, they won’t matter much. The important things work.

I’m still not sure about upgrading the iMac. I can’t do an erase and install on it without wasting few days getting back to my old setup. I may try the archive and install option instead.

For the record, this is the first time an ‘update’ style upgrade of any version of the Mac OS fails. I’ve been a Mac user for the last 22 years. Also, this is the first time I ever attempted to do an upgrade on a system that barely meets the minimum hardware requirements for the new system. So that may have something to do with the failure.

Leopard is a very slick cat so far.

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IMAP problems with Apple Mail.app

Rant, Software Review 3 Comments

I’ve been wanting to use Apple’s Mail.app for a while now. I’m a very heavy email user; I send and receive hundreds of messages a day, I do so from multiple computers, so I use IMAP.

I use Mozilla’s Thunderbird which works great, however a couple of years ago I purchased a powerbook, so I though why not give Apple’s Mail.app a try, the interface is great — everything from a user experience is great. However, I had a problem with IMAP, and the problem is a delay in reporting the presence of new messages in the inbox.

So at the time, I did not feel like trouble-shooting the problem all that much, so I kept using thunderbird.

A few month later apple released Tiger and the best thing about it was Spotlight, and when I read that it also searches mail messages, I was really excited about using it.

So I got a new Mac mini with Tiger installed. When I gave Tiger’s Mail.app a try and the same problem was still there. Since my powerbook was still my main computer for work, I decided to stick with thunderbird.

Now I’m using a Macbook Pro (I’ll make a new entry for this one on its own), so I thought since I’ve changed my Powerbook to this, I might as well try to move to Apple Mail.app, maybe they have fixed the problem since the last time I tried, and as I expected the problem was still there.

This time I was prepared to take the problem head on, so I called Apple!!!

The gentleman I got asked me a few questions, I told him what the problem is, and first thing he tells me that I might have to reset my Mail application preferences in order to start fresh, so I tell him I’ve been having the issue on multiple computers with multiple versions of Mail from multiple networks. So he goes and talks to some other dude, comes back and tells me it looks like it might be an issue with the provider, so I stop him and say that the problem is only showing up when I’m using Apple mail, no other IMAP client is doing this, and to TOP it all off, I work for the provider and I’m one of the engineers that designed and maintains the system and I’m quite willing to work with him or anyone else to prove it’s not the provider. Then he tells me in so many words that I have to wait for the next update, but without formally acknowledging that there is a problem with Mail.app.

So if you’re using IMAP don’t use mail, it sucks from that perspective.

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