I’m going to install it on my Mac Mini if the download ever finishes. 6 Mb/s service over telephone networks seems really, really slow compared to the cable that I’m used to.
When the other machines show up, I’ll base my install decision on how well the Mini is working. Because Server is now dirt cheap, I might flirt with the idea of installing it on the Mini, and see if I can simplify things with networked home folders and such. I’m still in the early stages of this thinking, though.
What I’ve been hearing is encouraging, but I’m going to wait until we install it at work where I have no choice in the matter then decide whether it’s personally worth it or not to get it for my own system at home. I’m guessing I will.
I want to upgrade, though I need to upgrade my RAM somewhat, I think, to make it comfortable, especially on my aging iMac. Anybody running it with out of the box RAM, no upgrades, on a 2006 era iMac model?
I also need to find a workable substitution for my PPC-only version of Photoshop. Anyone have any suggestions there? I’ve looked at GIMP and its GUI, or lack thereof (the last time I tried it) were just counter-intuitive to me.
Overall, I like it. I’m still giving all of the features a rundown.
Adjusted Dashboard to behave the old way.
Set Mail to the classic look. The junk mail button is now a thumbs down. Odd choice.
Tried natural scrolling, but turned it off and turned always show scroll bars on.
Launchpad is cool. I really like it and the gestures.
I installed it on my 2009 13" MacBook Pro with my newly ordered 500 GB hard disk and restored from my Time Machine backup. Smooth and painless. Right now FileVault is encrypting my hard disk.
There is one annoyance, though, and that is my Facebook Jabber contacts in iChat do not show up in the menu bar list. They are listed as online from within the main iChat window, but clicking on the menu bar icon only shows my AIM contacts. Anyone else experiencing this with multiple iChat accounts?
I think natural scrolling is ging to be like the invert-mouse option on FPSs and flight sims. One way is right, and one way is backwards.
Some Apple forums are filled with hate for Mission Control and its elimination of features from Expose and Spaces, but most of the complaints are about the changes, rather then the omitted things.
Do you need the full power of Photoshop, or could Photoshop Elements suit your needs? It is a bit more affordable.
I downloaded and installed Lion yesterday after reading thru this thread, and in general I think Lion is a good upgrade, but I’ve found something annoying and can’t figure out how to stop it:
I often shut my computer down with Safari windows open. I mean, I’m done, and the computer is about to turn off, so I just let it shut Safari down as part of the process. The problem is, now, when I reboot, it wants to re-open Safari with those same windows open, and I don’t want it to do that. I don’t want Safari open until I want Safari open, if you know what I mean, and even then I want it to open on my default homepage, not the page I was last looking at.
It’s not tied to Safari in particular. Open up the System Preferences, click on the General panel, and uncheck the checkbox captioned “Restore windows when quitting and re-opening apps”.
Nope, Safari still opens on boot with all windows that were open when I shut off the computer. Thanks for trying, tho. I’ll keep looking into it.
ETA: I found something under the “History” menu that says “Reopen All Windows From Last Session”, which is what it’s doing, but there’s no way to uncheck it or anything. It’s just highlighted and I can click it, but Safari is doing that every time the computer boots.
Ah. That suggests that it’s in your Login Items for some reason?
In System Preferences, select Users & Groups (which used to be called Accounts). Select your user name and then click the Login Items tab. If Safari is on the list, you can delete it.
iTunes Helper (no idea what this is, never seen it)
HPEventHandler (must have something to do with my HP printer)
HP Scheduler (must have something to do with my HP printer)
I see that there’s an “extension” on Apple’s site called SafariRestore that purports to do what I’m seeing, but one of the first things I did was turn Extensions off, and in any case I never downloaded SafariRestore. I even searched my hard drives for it, and it’s not there.
When you shut down or restart, you get a confirmation window. In that window is an option that is ALWAYS CHECKED to re-open Safari when booting. Unchecking the box causes Safari to not reopen on reboot, but once you do open Safari, it opens with all previous tabs and sites open.
And you have to uncheck that stupid box EVERY time you shut down or restart.
The idea is that your system will attempt to come back after a reboot exactly how it was before - so you don’t have to reopen your apps, reload your documents, etc. Just like they’re trying to remove the need to manually save things, and when you reopen an app you’ve closed it will come up in the same state it was the last time you used it.
Plus, when you’re short on RAM or processor time or I’m not sure what else, Lion can close out minimized apps and hold their state in suspension until you click back on that app, at which point it restarts in it’s last configuration. Very similar to iOS, they want you to never need to think about opening and closing apps. You are supposed to simply flip between the apps you need and let the system figure out the best memory usage strategy.
It is a source of never ending frustration to me that there are so few options for email clients, and that all of them suck ass. I think there’s 176 different apps to resize images and 238 to change creator codes, but it’s pushing it to say that even a dozen email clients exist.
I LOVED Eudora, overall. It had POWER. There was very little I could not accomplish with it, and why it was abandoned I will never understand.
Sigh…
So the installation went flawlessly for me, and I managed to keep a copy of the installer (for iMacs when they get here) before it self-deleted. I bit the bullet the installed Server as well.
The new Mission Control is awesome. I never really used Spaces or Expose or even the Widgets thing, but with the Magic Trackpad this all works so flawlessly that I’ve become a huge fan in just the last couple of days. I only wish that Cider wouldn’t steal mouse gestures so that I could multi-box Eve Online in full screen mode.
The Mac Mini is a non-custom configuration, so despite only having 4 GB of RAM, it’s pretty responsive.
Because it’s connected to the LCD TV in my bedroom, and it’s the only computer I currently have in the house, I’m impressed by the HiDPI mode enabled in Quartz Debug. The crappy television is actually useable from the bed!
I like the updated look of the UI widgets, too.
As for the “natural” scrolling, the thing that sucks is that it’s tied to both the mouse and the Magic Trackpad. Maybe that third-party driver (can’t think of its name right now) will be updated to correct this. The natural scrolling for the Trackpad is okay for lots of things, and not okay for other things. It’s universally horrid for the mouse wheel. My brain is wired after 24 years of graphical operating systems to move the scroll bar, and so the non-natural setting is actually quite natural when moving content using scroll bars. As for switching spaces in Mission Control, I’ve started to brainwash myself that there’s an invisible scrollbar that I’m moving in order to switch spaces.