Thu, 28 Aug 2003
Running a Loop.
One of the reasons why I ‘blog less these days is that it just isn’t part of my routine anymore.
On the GNU/Linux side of my computer I, first of all, have a lot of very nice, free text editors to work in.
And second of all, I just got into the habit of always working on a weblog post in the background that I could work on when I felt that I needed mental space from my task at hand.
But the date when I switched to Mac OS X on my laptop coincides almost exactly with the date when my weblogging hiatus began.
I just fell out of the habit for a while.
The text editor situation is also a bit annoying. I know that I can get all of the same text editors I was using on GNU/Linux to run on OS X under Apple’s X Windows server, but I tend to prefer using native applications on whatever platform I’m running.
And most of the good text editors on the Mac (or ftp programs, for that matter) are proprietary apps that cost money.
They’re good apps, I’m sure, but paying for a usable ftp program and a usable text editor is like having to pay extra rent to have running water in your flat.
Stuff like that aren’t perks or extras. They’re basic features that every single operating system should support natively, and not in the ugly and unusable way that Apple has implemented ftp support in the Finder (OS X’s file browser).
And a simplistic rich text editor like TextEdit doesn’t count either.
Well in one case Free Software comes to the rescue, as it always does on the other Unixes.
Luckily for me, since most of the ftp servers I need to work with support sftp, I could switch to fugu for the ftp support.
Fugu’s a very nice user interface for SFTP, SCP and SSH available under the BSD license from the University of Michigan and has deservedly won an Apple Design award.
The text editor situation isn’t that clear. I’m writing this in a fairly nice free as in beer text editor called mi, while most of my other work is either in Project Builder (nicer than I expected) or Alpha (a pale shadow of it’s old Mac Classic self).
OS X is an interesting beast in many other ways. Feels a lot slower than the GNU/Linux system, which is mostly due to OS X not supporting Quartz Extreme on my laptop, as well as it’s monstrously excessive memory use.
And the overzealous unhinted anti-aliasing, probably all nice, sweet and pretty on larger, higher resolution screens, makes this small screen look as if it has been smeared with vaseline.
About as nice as trying to read a newspapers through a thick mud of multicoloured sugar. Which makes you wonder why the colour schemes in Windows XP and OS X seem to have been chosen by a bunch of overactive five year olds high on chocolate, sugar cereals and ritalin.
Sheesh.
Baldur Bjarnason.Clifton, Bristol.
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