A key, opening question for many is whether or not to use an upgrade install or a clean wipe of your drive (after backup!) and then do a new install. With each OS upgrade, I have always advocated a Clean Install for a few reasons.
- It forces you to get your file system organized for that important backup.
- While the Apple techs worked very hard at devising the save & restore routines, they've never tested it on my machine. I guarantee they didn't have Accordance. They didn't run my combination of Quicksilver and other 3rd party freeware...
- A fresh start is exactly that, and can be a good thing for those of us who clutter up their systems.
- The time spent reinstalling your applications is the equivalent of spring cleaning in your closet. "Have I really worn that (used that) in the last year?
Install of the OS and my applications went great. Nothing I use regularly was rendered inoperable, at least not after a short upgrade. I intentionally have not yet upgraded my work MacBook for the purpose of seeing how working different went on that machine and my one at home. Some features I have missed when I'm on my older machine.
- Spotlight's improvements have made it much more handy.
- Quicklook -- I was amazed how much I use this feature. It was indespensible when I decided to go through my files and delete obsolete stuff... never has it been this easy to just browse and see a page of each document to discern whether it could be trashed.
- I've found all the complaints about the fancy Dock and the translucent menu bar to be folly. I keep my Dock on auto-hide and it's just fine when go to use it. And if you have a background picture that looks odd with the translucent menu bar, I'd suggest you grow up, pick a solid background, and get back to work. (Sharp tone in jest)
- Finally, the enhancement that helped me the most was additions to Applescript.
For bible scholars, I have not uncovered any issues with lost application functionality. I also found no compulsory features that necessitate upgrading now.
All in all, I think it's a great OS. It enables several things that only a common user will benefit from indirectly in the new apps they have available (such as a shared iCal calendar).
Probably the biggest problem I have run into since my Leopard install was a problem with Quicksilver proxies. I started using QS access to menu items so extensively that it took me a while to adjust back to the "old" way. I reinstalled QS and nothing seems to work. And it is not consistent. Sometimes I'll hit my proxy keystroke instinctually, and the menu items show up in QS. The next time I do the same thing in the same program, it won't work. strange.
ReplyDeleteI really like the enhancements to Preview, that is my 2nd favorite to quicklook. Though one thing (hopefully an oversight) that Preview somehow lost is the ability to choose a selection of a PDF image and copy it with command-C! I couldn't believe such a basic function disappeared. I've been forced to go back to Adobe Reader for some of my PDF work.