I bought my macbook pro 13 late 2010, which meant it came with snow leopard. I very much enjoyed snow leopard, as it was miles faster than my old dell with windows 7 (due to OS and faster processor, plus more RAM, but thats not the point...). When I heard Lion was to be released, I got even more excited. As the release date approached, I debated whether or not to purchase Lion, as it didn't add too many features that I'd personally need. However, I figured that Lion is the future, and I'd probably eventually wind up buying it, so I got it. I've had it for about 24 hours now, and, while it may not be enough time for some to judge, I would like to share my thoughts and get feedback from others.
Pros.
Upgrade was painless. It was really neat having 100% of my files, apps (including office 2011 and photoshop cs5) be transferred to the new OS
without me having to re-enter serial numbers and the like. Very nice.
I then decided that, because i enjoy speed, that i'd do a clean install, which was also painless. I burned the Lion .dmg image before doing the upgrade to a DVD, because I knew my eventual goal would be to do a clean install, since Windows has taught me that.
It seems to be just as fast (although may be a little slower, but i'm sure that has to do with it caching and "learning" which programs I use most) as SL when booting, and doing other things. As the week goes by, and the cache builds, I will later comment on speed comparisons.
The new system profiler shows more information about the computer when expanded, which I enjoyed.
Internet worked, as did everything else.
Mail is improved. Layout is more organized.
Cons
The gestures are a bit awkward. Whether or not its just because I'm coming from SL, a lot has been changed. Natural scrolling seems like a pain, i'm too conditioned to normal scrolling. The gesture to see the desktop has changed, and by default, swiping 3 fingers to the left to go back is not functioning by default, you have to change that gesture to "two or three fingers" to get it to work. Double tap to hold a click is no longer a gesture. I used that a lot. All in all, I'm not a fan of the new gestures, and 100% prefer the ones in SL, and wish they were all present in lion.
Some of the text Apple chose to use is odd. For example, in the system preferences, the "show all" button appears greyed out, as do the navigation buttons in Finder. I'm much more used to having Black text on Grey button rather than Darker grey text on lighter grey button.
There aren't many new features that I can use to make me more productive. But I knew that going into buying it
Calendar and Address book have been destroyed. I'm not a fan at all of trying to make a computer program look "realistic." It looks tacky, childish, and sticks out like a sore thumb compared to the rest of the GUI that i enjoy. This also goes for programs like quicktime that use a black window border. Either it's my OCD or personal preference, but i want consistency in my GUI.
After doing the clean install (note, when i did just the upgrade, i had no issue), my facebook no longer worked because i chose to have the option of having to authorize devices on my account. Not a huge deal, but be warned.
This is a little review of what i like and doing like about Lion. maybe as i get more used to the gestures and other features, I will enjoy it more. Havent tried other touted features like versions. But right now, I'm not entirely convinced my $30 was well spent. If you have any questions, or want me to talk about other parts of Lion, let me know!!!
-
-
BetterTouchTool.
Install it and customize your gestures to your preferences. -
I'm not a fan of Lion personally, considering switching back to Snow Leopard.
The new features are nice, but some of them shouldn't be on by default.
When you close an application, it just hides itself rather than really closing. This is nice on iOS, not on a desktop operating system. Why? Well, when I'm updating an app, the process is not killed the update manager tells me the app is still running. What happens if you are not an advanced user? You'll have to call tech support?
AutoCorrect. This is nice in a text editing software, but not everywhere. I'm having a bilingual use of my computer but OS X can't understand that, so if I'm using French it just messes every word I write -_-. -
why not just turn off this options you do not like on?
-
Can Lion's touchpad be configured to act exactly the same way as in Snow Leopard, leaving the new features to the new gestures?
-
My only question is why did you upgrade to Lion if you didn't feel it could do much more for you?
Being a power user I checked out every function available in Lion to see if it would increase my workflow and it exceeded my expectations and eye candy and on-screen visuals were not even on the list of importance. It's always the little things that nobody takes time to check out, but rather they spend more time judging the system on what they see when they first turn it on. Is it perfect? Nope, nothing is but Microsoft has a lot of work to do if they want Windows 8 to even come close.Attached Files:
-
-
It certainly wouldn't hurt to politely tell Apple that the new iCal look is bad though. -
Hm. I like the new iCal look. Matches the one on the iPad perfectly.
I'd also like to point out - we take the whole easy upgrade process for granted (i.e. download, click on dock, you're done within 5 minutes from the time you launch app store to the time you boot up Lion). No serial #s, no activation issues.
In contrast, just the other day, I reinstalled Parallels to access my Windows partition. Just THAT minor change made Windows activation go crazy. I had to not only reactivate my completely legit copy of Windows, but it wouldn't even do it online due to a "hardware change." And let's face it--virtual machines have been around long enough that there is no excuse for the OS not to recognize the difference between that and a reinstallation on a new machine. I had to go through some incredibly long tedious 10-minute phone call just to reactivate a product that had been activated ages ago.
Then I had to reactivate Office 2010.....
Now to be fair, Apple probably wouldn't really go out of its way to add support for Windows programs accessing the OSX side either, so it may be too much to ask Microsoft to make their activation system cater to a program like Parallels. On the other hand, their activation system is just painful and probably completely ineffectual. For example, in the phone activation process, the disembodied voice actually asked me how many machines I had installed Windows on. So I only had one machine with Windows. But what if I had 10 but still answered 1? Or what if I had only 1 and answered 5? ... ...
Well, this turned into a rant about Windows activation, but anyway.... -
-
Not sure if this will fix your issue with calendar appearance...
Change iCal Leather Interface Back to Aluminum in OS X Lion
I just installed lion a few hours ago. Have not spent a lot of time with it yet but so far I like it. I've disabled the natural scrolling just because I switch frequently between OS X and Windows7 and while scrolling two different ways isn't impossible to learn, it does make it a bit awkward.
I give Lion a 5 out of 5.
*I did an upgrade vs a clean install. Although I did make a bootable USB flash from the Lion installer's dmg image prior to upgrading (incase I need it again for some reason) -
Security features are always welcomed, but i'm not too sure why they couldn't also add them into SL. However, I do understand that, from a business perspective, in order to make money, they need to make their new product look good compared to whats out there.
-
You have to give people credit for figuring things out for themselves. Not everyone needs to frequent an online forum to figure things out. Part of the fun of having a computer is discovering things on your own. Also look at it this way, anyone that is so interested in using all the gestures will certainly figure their way around OS X and find them all.
At any rate I did solve your concern and gave you the path to make it work your way. You didn't acknowledge it but rather you came back with a rebuttal.
You have to understand that a large amount of Apple's customers running Macs and Windows machines have an iPhone or iPad. They want to create a more familiar environment between their handhelds and their computers which makes sense. They didn't add a faux leather calendar just for the sake of. It's what's on the iPad. It makes no sense for Apple's computers and handhelds to have 2 completely different UI environments.
When people buy due to aesthetics it's usually the exterior of the product and in the case of computers maybe the overall UI but I highly doubt people are picking apart how the calendar and address book look as part of their buying decision. Don't take this the wrong way because you are entitled to how you feel but IMO, it's petty. I would figure the calendar and address book functions would be more important in buying a computer. Despite how you feel about iCal and Address book they have some amazing features in Lion. -
-
-
No worries, all good. But you still ignored the fact that I solved your issue. -
First time...
-
Apple manages to make the programs peculiar mixes of physical objects and standard OS X paradigms with little success. This is particular noticeable in Address Book, where the look causes artificial limitations and for the most part is just there to look pretty (exemplified by the red bookmark with absolutely no function).
John Siracusa writes about this in his review, so there's no need for me to go on further when he's much better at explaining it than I am:
Mac OS X 10.7 Lion: the Ars Technica review -
I will ask you this, did it ever occur to you that for every one person on the web that posts that they hate look of iCal and Addressbook that there are 10 more people that actually like it?
-
Never had a single lockup or freeze from Tiger all the way through Snow Leopard. I've had TWO already with Lion. I think there's too much "wonky" stuff going on in the background. Not real impressed that Apple chose to make people PAY for this "upgrade".
If I want an iPad, I'll buy an iPad. I expect a Macbook Pro to be a Macbook Pro. -
kornchild2002 Notebook Deity
That is the price you pay for being an early adopter. We are also getting to a point where operating systems are becoming more complex. There are a lot more features in SL and Lion over what Tiger offered hence there is more room for bugs to creep in. That is just the way technology works. Things become increasingly complex almost at an exponential rate with the amount of features that are added. Mix in consumer demand and how everyone wants everything right this very second and developers have it hard. Many new products receive patches in their first few months of operation. I have yet to come across a solid set of software or hardware while being an early adopter to said technology. OS X Lion hasn't been perfect but neither was Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows 98 SE, Windows ME was so bad I reverted back to 98 SE, XP, Vista (which was so bad I went back to XP), and even when installing and running 7. That is just the way things go if you buy and install an OS the first week it is out. You have to deal with all of these initial bugs that were missed when the OS was being programmed.
I also don't see what the big deal is with having app that look similar to their iOS counterparts. After all, Safari on the iPhone and iPad looked a lot like the Snow Leopard version. "If I want a Mac, I'll buy a Mac. I expect an iPhone to be an iPhone." I am sorry but that mentality doesn't really fly especially with Apple trying to unify things. Why not have iCal look more like what is on the iPad if it turns out to be more functional? Why not have the iPod app on the iPad look more like iTunes?
All of the aesthetics regarding that are nitpicking. Meh, I don't like the way that looks. It is too similar to the iPad, meh, meh, meh. I can fully understand not liking the way something looks but just because it borrows functionality from one device does not make it that device. The iPad and iPhone borrow a lot from Mac OS X Snow Leopard but that didn't make those devices a Mac just as Lion borrows a lot from iOS but that doesn't make it iOS. -
But you are right about being an early adopter; its good in that you experience it first, but bad in that you experience it first. You have the "here and now" without the track record.
Also, how do I quote someone and have it reference their name and the post, as I see others doing? -
Quote my reply and you'll see how it's done. -
Don't take this the wrong way but it really bothers me when others say that people buy Macs because of the way they look and they are generally less inclined to make an informed decision based on features available. Sadly based on your posts you resemble this type of customer. -
I used Lion for a couple of days, made some notes on the new features, and finally switched back to its predecessor, Snow Leopard. While Lion has a few significant improvements, I believe that too many of the new features were poorly implemented to make Lion worth the upgrade. Here were my main points:
Pros:
- The upgrade process from SL to Lion was easy and reasonably short. Lion booted and operated without any issues. Based on my own experiences with multiple Windows and Linux distro upgrades, this is a plus.
- The price is very modest, even for an evolutionary OS release.
- AirDrop has many broad real-world applications.
- The new save/resume system in Lion is very powerful and unmatched by competing operating systems.
- The changes to Mail are an improvement and largely welcome.
- Apple finally included security features such as ASLR. These are a must when their OS is becoming a higher-profile target for malware.
Cons:
- Multitouch gestures: The drastic changes in multitouch behavour of Lion (compared to SL) are inconsistent with past versions of Mac OS X and completely without excuse from a design perspective. Given that one of the Mac's main strengths is the touchpad, this inconsistency is not insignificant.
- PowerPC support: Apple really dropped the ball here by turning its back on legacy support for its own technology. Once again, an inconsistent approach to designing Lion.
Somehow Apple thought that combining iOS features into Mac OS X would be great, even though the two OSs are designed for different hardware and different application usage scenarios.
- Launchpad: a feature of iOS, it is completely redundant and if the user can get the same functionality by going to the dock and opening the Applications folder in grid mode. Launchpad is utterly useless for any Mac OS X user.
- Full-screen mode: this is a feature when it is implemented at the application level? I don't think so. Developers have to code this into the application; Lion cannot full-screen applications unless they've been explicitly designed for that capability. Lion enables the capability of a feature and calls it a feature, but it doesn't actually have the feature.
Mixed:
- Mission Control: on one hand, MC merely combines existing OS X features and presents itself as something new. On the other hand, it works well for all users by introducing an easy tool for managing virtual desktops. -
-
Seems like the features that people complain most about (scrollbars, natural scrolling) can be easily turned off though. Having options is a good thing!
-
-I'm not too much a fan of Resume. I know its really useful for others, and am glad they included it, but I don't really need to have my applications saved at the state they are in. Its also really frustrating that, when I shut down, the "open windows when turned on" is always checked, and wish it wasn't by default.
-I agree, multitouch was perfect for me in SL. There's not one new gesture they added that I find useful.
-Agree again. when I upgraded from SL, I wondered the redundancy of the application grid list on the dock and launchpad. Still confuses me.
-Full screen = never thought of it like that. Tried it in Firefox, but full screen doesn't exist. Weird. -
What would have been REALLY useful is some method with tabs or buttons to switch between them without going to a separate screen. Something functionally equivalent to Windows' Taskbar. Switching from window to window in Windows is a one-step process (click the name of the file you want at the bottom of the screen). Switching from window to window in Expose in Snow Leopard is two-step (call up Expose, choose the right window). With stacked windows in Mission Control, it almost sounds like OSX Lion has made switching from one Word document to another when you have several open a three-step process (call up MC, find the right file in the stack, click on it). -
-
kornchild2002 Notebook Deity
I also feel that Mission Control is an upgrade especially since I can easily create new desktops that run single programs in full screen mode. Switching between them is rather easy. This comes in handy whenever I have a csv file in Excel that I pretty much need to be in fullscreen mode fore, a Word document open, and running MATLAB code analyzing the data produced by Excel and later importing that into Word for a written report.
Now, the feature I don't like is Apple taking away two finger swiping for backward and forward navigation in Finder. I really liked that feature in SL and I continue to swipe in vein while running Lion and even Windows 7 just hoping that Finder/Windows Explorer goes back. Taking away legacy support of PowerPC programs also kind of hurt me as I had Mac mp3 gain installed on my system. The PowerPC version was the only one that fully worked as the Intel release was buggy at best. Now the Intel release doesn't work because the underlying code is still for the PowerPC version. I can understand why Apple stopped supporting PowerPC programs since they started transitioning to Intel 5 years ago (which might as well be 100 technology years) but there are still many people rocking PowerPC Macs and some programs never made it over to the Intel platform. Then again, I have issues running programs built for Windows 95, 98, and even some XP programs under Windows 7. -
-
masterchef341 The guy from The Notebook
Fullscreen apps are primarily a developer feature. It's a user-feature for the apps that have coded it in. There are MANY developer features in each OS release. These features have benefits for end users, but it takes time for developers to implement them.
You can't really blame them for not doing everything. I'm sure most relevant apps will have the code incorporated shortly. Firefox comes to mind.
In the meantime, enjoy fullscreen safari, itunes, iphoto, imovie, etc. -
Not sure if you figured this out yet (did not read every post yet) but you can go into trackpad option and disable the scroll feature (cant remember what it is called) to change how you scroll down (so it is like all other systems and tiger...not like a smart phone).
I also found this annoying (have no issues doing that kind of scrolling on a touch screen phone.. but with a trackpad it is awkward so I disabled it)
Just what I found out after my 5min of usage on lion...
Also, I learned that when you do an upgrade it will run hot for about an hour while it indexes all your files.. after that it will run as cool as before (had the fans running at full blast and thought something was wrong until I saw the magnifying glass in the upper right was indicating it was caching so I figured I would leave it alone and see what happened)
D. -
seems like lion is the vista of mac os. obviously thats not a good thing.
-
But when introducing new features that you want to start a trend with, generally it's better to have them on by default so people know they're there, rather than keeping them hidden in some control panel somewhere. If Apple included the 3 features above but had them off by default, a good number of users wouldn't even know those features were added.
Anyway, probably won't be able to tell if Lion is a success or a flop until at least two quarters in.
EDIT: Plus, you may even end up liking the new features. Reading about them in a blog or on a forum doesn't really tell you anything except whether the author of that post liked them. There's nothing like trying it out yourself, and then turning the features you don't like off. -
-
-
Still, I can see why some people wouldn't like it compared to the simplicity of Expose. -
-
-
kornchild2002 Notebook Deity
If its too early to tell and "a stretch" why are you using that comparison? Every OS release has some type of issues and the people complaining will always be much louder than the ones who haven't had any negative experiences. Calling it the Vista of Mac OS X would be an insult to OS X. You can't properly make that judgement, and definitely shouldn't be throwing it out there, until you have actually had first hand experience with OS X Lion for a much longer period of time. It doesn't matter if you love it or hate it, a proper assessment cannot be made this early in the game.
-
Vista was buggy when released, causing BSODs among other errors. Lion, what what I'm seeing, isn't doing that (at least as much).
I have also noticed two little things that bother me with Lion. Resume is always checked when I shut down, and even if I uncheck it, the next time I go to shut down, it is checked again. I want a fresh boot if i'm going to be shutting down; otherwise, i'd put it to sleep.
Also, The fine adjustments to brightness and volume (in SL, it was option+shift+volume/brightness up/down) no longer works. While it may seem small, it is immensly helpful when I have my headphones plugged into the computer. The fine adjustments allow me to get just the right volume. -
Don't we have keys that do the brightness and volume?
PS I guess you are on an old mac? -
-
But why would one use such a long way of doing things if there are already dedicated keys for that purpose?
-
Pressing one of the dedicated volume buttons and the Option and Shift keys turned the volume up or down in much smaller increments than had you just pressed the buttons without any modifier keys. The same was true for the brightness buttons.
With Lion Apple removed this extra functionality. -
I downloaded it the first day thinking it would be an improvement.
WRONG. It sucks. I've had more crashed, slowdowns, and general wonkiness than I've ever had. (I've had none in over ten years). I hadn't seen a beach ball in a long time. Now it's my friend.
They should had left well enough alone, and not tried to turn my MBP into a freaking IPAD!!!!! Bad on ya, Apple. -
The startup and even shutdown sometimes is slower than SL but I haven't had any crash issues.
-
I've been playing around with Lion for 2 days now.. never used SL before, never been in the the mac world. I gotta say im loving it compared to windows... still digging it in, i guess its so simple to use that i get confused lol
Not encountered to any bugs with lion what so ever... so far, good -
Have had Lion for 24 hours now, here's a review
Discussion in 'Apple and Mac OS X' started by LordRayden, Jul 22, 2011.