Apple’s new OS X Lion hit the App Store today. This is a first, all previous OS updates were delivered through hard media and it is ushering as you’ll see here, the era of iDevices functionalities bleeding into laptops and desktops. My two year old daughter’s dream may come true after all; having already swiped iPads and iPhones screens, any screen to her is now touch sensitive including the TV. This twist of faith is all the more interesting that Apple’s challenge, less than 5 years back, was to find ways to make it as easy as possible to use Apple portable devices as laptops and desktops were. Apple pushed the envelop so far in overcoming and perfecting that now iPhones, iPads and iPods features are brought back into laptops and desktops through the combination of software and hardware: OS X Lion and multi-gesture trackpads.
The 3.8GB file took about 2 hours to download and it was smooth sailing after that: 30 minutes to install, no need to restart the machine from a CD to install or need to migrate data back into the upgraded machine. OS installation has taken the form of any old software you would install on your computer.
SCROLLING: Down is the new Up
Then starts the main quirk I notice in this update, now remember he’s “the king of the desktop” so maybe he can make this change in scrolling. To be sure, dragging 2 fingers on a trackpad to scroll down a webpage is not new. What’s new is that you now have no other option; 1/scroll bars only appear when 2 fingers are placed on the trackpad and 2/instead of dragging down to go down the page you now have to push up the trackpad; and inversely.
Apple’s core approach is motivated by a smart goal in my view: exploit every last pixel of any screen by simply doing away with the scroll bars that allow navigating a screen page. This adds an additional neweness feel to its OS. It is done by taking advantage of trackpads allowing multi-gestures, each corresponding to a specific command.
I found this a bit confusing at first, but if you think about the way you navigate an iDevice screen it works the same new way. You move you finger up to go down the page and inversely. Makes sense but old habits die hard and it will certainly take me a bit of time to get used to this.
Apple seems to have anticipated this issue and starts off the first OS X Lion boot with an explanation of the “Up is now Down” process.
FULL SCREEN
Another way that Apple is intending to leverage every last pixel of any screen is through “full screen”, a function available for some applications, in particular the entire iLife suite, and which gets rid of all the applications frames and controls to only keep the most important… in full screen. May seem trivial but it does actually make a difference for very visual applications.
LAUNCH PAD
Another sign of the new converging era is LaunchPad, which brings the look and feel of iPhones and iPads to laptops as a way to manage and access applications.
NEW SYSTEM PREFERENCES ITEMS
Two new items and one significant changes have been added:
- Mission control: in effect a merge of the previous expose and spaces merged together. My initial take is that it does encourage the use of the spaces feature, probably too cumbersome thus far. This features allows to organize a computer into several desktops, maybe: a personal, a professional and photo/video editing one.
- A ‘mail, contacts, calendars’ icon taken right out of iOS that allows you to set up email, Caldav and contacts accounts in one place
- In the trackpad preferences, and for the scrolling reasons we know, things get a bit more complex than they used to be with an added flexibility allowing to choose the type of gesture associated with command.
NEW MAIL
Mail has seen significant changes with update, including:
- A 3-column lay out greatly facilitating email management, the traditional lay out is still
- Favorites, through icons pinned to the top bar for quick access
- A supposedly better flag management system that remains to be tested
Let’s also note that FaceTime now comes bundled into OS X Lion and it is no longer necessary to buy the app from the App Store. For anyone that spends a number of ours daily on Safari and works with tabs, you’ll be happy to know that ‘Command-clicked’ links now open in a tab next to the active one instead of as a last tab; thus making it easier to manage multiple tabs. Firefox and Chrome have had this feature for a while.
Have you upgraded to Lion yet? What are your thoughts so far?
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