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What Apple wants you to do is change behavior: Scroll two fingers across trackpad or an Apple touch mouse to make the scrollbar appear.īetanews founder Nate Mook and I got into a debate about this behavior. If the scrollbar reappeared when I moved my cursor - say, across the screen - I wouldn't have stumbled so badly over the UI changes. Well, the scrollbar isn't gone completely, it's just no longer persistent. To that end, Apple takes something away: The scrollbar. The two objectives are intertwined with respect to certain decisions Apple has made regarding how some very basic UI elements function differently. From that perspective, Lion radically differs from all other modern operating systems, with exception of Chrome OS, which only functions in full-screen mode. Most of the usability changes are philosophical and support an Apple worldview about computers and mobile devices: The company is driving users to full-screen apps and trying to mimic the touchscreen experience of iOS devices. For the rest of this post, I'll focus on one and put it in broader context. There are plenty of other tweaks and features that require users to change their habits. However the "duplicate" option has been moved to the File menu where it can replace "save as". Apple has replaced it with "save a version", while some applications, like Pages, offer "save" but no longer "save as". For apps supporting Lion's new auto-save feature there no longer is a "save as" option. Lion has a new auto-save feature that looks handy, but will require some people (me among them) to adapt behavior. It's a matter of whether you're a "sink or swim" personality or someone who goes a toe at a time. Don't worry, you can return to the old familiar motif - and some people might want to. Others will be surprised at how different is the user interface. Frequent users of Apple Mail via MobileMe will find the interface mostly familiar. This is the first OS X upgrade ever for which my first impressions are negative rather than glowingly positive. I started out writing a simple news story about Lion's release but lost so much time writing - thanks to all these changes - that my post is late and its content changed. I'll offer a full review later, but for now my initial first impressions are negative.Īpple imposes fundamental usability changes with regards to the user interface that you'll either like or despise. It might have taken longer for Apple Mail to upgrade content and accounts than for Lion to install. The software downloaded, prompted for password to install and did its thing (meanwhile I took a short shower). I went to Mac App Store, stopped at the Lion page and clicked purchase. Never have I experienced a major operating system update as easy as this - on a personal computer, anyway.
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