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OS X
World
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Welcome
to Mac OS X 10.1! A Visual Tour with Commentary
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© Mike
Vannorsdel & Staff
When Mac OS X 10.1 hits your CD-ROM
Today Apple has released the first
major update to Mac OS X. And here at AppleLust, you'll
get a primer on what's new, installation, and gotchas.
Let's get started.
Before you install
When you finally get your Mac OS X
10.1 Update CD, there are some preparations that should
be done before installing the update. First is to
update your machine's firmware. Without doing this,
the installer is likely to crash and your updated
system likely to have problems. You can find the latest
firmware updates at Apple's Knowledge Base. Next,
make sure to update your Mac OS 9 systems to Mac
OS 9.2.1 and apply all other system updates by
running Software Update. And finally, backup
important files. You never know what will happen
when applying such an update.
Running the installer
Mac OS X 10.1 is a goliath of an update.
A whopping 620MB worth of tweaks, fixes, and goodies.
The first step is to pop in the CD. Depending on which
system you're in, Mac OS 9 or OS X, there will be
an Install Mac OS X icon. Double click it and you're
on your way. After the system reboots, you'll be greeted
by the familiar installer as you've seen with Mac
OS X 10.0. Go through the license agreements and choose
the disk that has the Mac OS X system you want to
update. I suggest choosing a custom install and unselecting
localizations you do not need. The next step is to
install. This will take a while and you will notice
something that was missing in the Mac OS X 10.0 installer,
Optimizing System Performance is now properly performed.
Welcome to Puma
As you boot into your freshly updated
Mac OS X 10.1, you'll notice a larger boot panel with
a much more Aqua-ish Apple logo. This is one of the
many appearance changes found in this update. You'll
also notice a new login screen where you can have
it configured to present a list of users, similar
to multiple users in Mac OS 9, or the original name
and password fields. As your desktop comes up, you
many have some broken links in your Dock and your
background image might be gone. These are simple to
fix and restore. But let's see what's new.
New Applications
Mac OS X 10.1 comes with new versions
of most of the original applications. Most contain
minor tweaks and fixes. But some are totally new!
Most notably right off the bat is DVD Player. Yep,
DVD playback is now possible in Mac OS X. More on
this later. Also included in this update is iMovie2,
Airport Admin Utility, Airport Setup Assistant, and
Java Web Start. Each self explanatory.
DVD playback!
Here's one of the most sought after
features missing from Mac OS X 10.0: native DVD playback.
DVD Player is very similar to Apple DVD Player in
Mac OS 9, with a nice newly redesigned controller.
DVD playback works very well and I had no quirks or
problems with it. The best part is having a DVD movie
playing in the background while working, all without
missing a beat. Granted this is on an dual 800MHz
G4. The DVD appeared to use 33-50% of processor 2
while processor 1 did everything else. I'm not sure
how well this will work on lower end machines. Also
of note, the keyboard eject button now works properly,
opening and closing the tray. Very nice for QuickSilvers.
The New System Preferences
System Preferences also got an overhaul.
The obvious part of it is the new organization scheme,
putting each panel into one of four groups (Personal,
Hardware... click on thumb for larger view). You also
have the choice to put arrows in Windows, both at
one end or one at each end. (See below.) There are
some differences in some of the panels (see below
too).
Oh, and while we're at it, the Meni
blinking has been sped up instaed of three
slower blinks you get two faster ones. There is no
way to set this as in OS 9's "general" CP.
Dock's New Tricks
The Dock has added a couple new tricks
to its forte. For one, I can now be pinned to either
side of the screen aswell as the bottom. And my favorite
which is sure to get your attention:
It appears Internet Explorer can't wait
to tell me something. This happens when an application
needs your attention; it jumps up and down excitedly
in the dock. It took me a while to get used to it,
especially when my first taste of this new feature
was when 3 applications needed my attention all at
once. There was a whole party happening in my dock!
(See below for more images of Dock.)
Better application binding
A much needed repair was a more reliable
method of changing the default application of file
types. This now finally works as it should, and it
even creates a default list of all the applications
that can handle that file type. Basically Mac OS X
will ignore the creator code, but leave it intact
so Mac OS 9 will correctly handle it. For instance
you create a .jpg in Photoshop. The file's creator
code is Photoshop, but if your default jpg app in
Mac OS X is Preview, then the saved file will have
a Preview icon and open in Preview when double clicked.
But from Mac OS 9, the file will have a Photoshop
icon and open in Photoshop. You can also still change
the file's default app on a per file basis, ie: change
the application for one jpg but not for all. Make
sense? It works very nice I think. But I'm sure others
will complain anyways.
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The
Get Info and Type/Creator changes.
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Menubar controls
Also noteworthy are the new controls
available in the menubar. There is one for sound where
you can adjust the sound volume. There is another
for displays where you can change resolutions and
colors depths. And there is one for the clock which
you can view it as an icon (as above) or as text.
All very handy and the icons look very nice.
Burning from the Finder
Mac OS X 10.1 now supports burning CDs
right from the Finder. Simply insert your CD, initialize,
drag files onto it, and hit burn. It works just as
it did in System 9 a piece of cake! You can
also burn disk images from Disk Copy and erase CDRWs
with the Disk Utility.
Performance
Steve Jobs has stated that the main
goal of Puma was to boost performance. I can say that
Apple has succeeded as Puma is indeed fast. It seems
every aspect of Mac OS X has been accelerated. From
low level disk I/O to UI responsiveness. Every application
and function should now be faster in Mac OS X. Most
notable for me was much smoother OpenGL performance
in games such as American McGee's Alice and excellent
Quicktime movie performance. I was able to play several
movie trailers at once and drag each around the screen
with out a single skip. Every UI action is also fast,
from menus to window resizing.
We'll have more reports soon on speed.
Address Book and Mail.app
While basically functionally equivalent,
the Mail.app and Address Book are there all ready
to go for your emailing pleasure. There are some
enhancements to Mail.app but we will talk about
them in anoher piece. It's speedy too, but some
glitches remain with connecting to certain types
of accounts.
And now the gotchas
Like all software, Puma is not perfect.
I immediately found some bugs and problems. Some Carbon
applications and a couple Cocoa applications will
need to be updated for Mac OS X 10.1. Fetch and Aliens
vs. Predator demo would not run at all while OmniWeb
frequently crashed. I'm sure this morning we'll see
many updates as developers update their software.
Some bugs I found were with DHCP and some system preferences
shortcuts. DHCP didn't seem to work when Mac OS X
10.1 was installed on a slave drive. And system preference
shortcuts found in the menus, ie: Apple Menu->Locations->Network
Preferences, don't work on Mac OS X 10.0.4 systems
that are pre-installed on newer G4's (build 4S10).
These are not show stoppers and probably won't affect
many people. You many also find yourself resetting
preferences for the Finder and system as some of the
settings from 10.0.x don't directly translate over.
Final Words
some other enhancements include LaserWriter
8 defintions (we will see if our LaserWriter works
on it - so is LocalTalk back?).
Mac OS X 10.1 is finally ready for primetime.
Now all we need are those essential applications to
gain Mac OS X nativity. Puma is fast and full of new
features; much more than I can cover here. I leave
the rest for you to explore. But we will have plenty
of coverage for you in the coming weeks...
Mike
Vannorsdel
What do you think? Talk about in our
Forums... We have a new 10.1
Forum with a new
thread to help you out.
A Visual Tour of 10.1
We have assembled various
screen shots of OS X 10.1. Just click on the
images to see larger ones. And...enjoy!!
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AirPort
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The Dock
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Dock
Preferences
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The Dock
Itself
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Desktop
Looks
and behaves more like Os 9's.
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General
Preferences
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Keyboard
Prefs
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Log In
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Sound Prefs
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Universal
Access
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Users Prefs
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We a;ready have several copies at the site. As we
work with it we'll you know. If you have questions,
go to our forums...
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