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To: Swordmaker
Nope. I never carry a grudge.

That's wise because I used to big time until it hit me (I'm a little slow) that it gets me nothing and in the end it's usually always about nothing, aaaannnnddd, it's like an acid in your system that eats away at you inside. So I stopped that B.S. and life is that much better.

We need to meet and have a Freep lunch one of these days.

That would be cool after my crunch time of the next few weeks is over and I see what I've got myself into although somewhere in Sacramento is probably best and we've probably met as the IT world is a small place in a small town. I used to know a guy who did dental offices in '91 so I might know your friend.

The X in OSX is a Triple pun. . . for some a quadruple pun. The original operating system for the Macintosh computers was Apple MacOS and had reached version 9. It was at the end of its rope. Apple was completely dumping MacOS and moving over to an entirely new architecture built on a version of the OS they got by buying Steve Jobs' NeXT computer company. The new designation should have been MacOS version 10, but there would never be a MacOS 10.

So, the one I had was on 9. It was alright and worked well but it didn't blow me away like O/S X or the 95 interface did. I knew it came from NeXT, people try to deride Jobs as a marketing guy and he was one and a brilliant one at that but he knew what he wanted, he may not have ground out the code but it was his vision sparked by Xerox that drove development of the (Lisa) Mac GUI and everything else. I like the story of how he was so mad that the display scratched on an Iphone, that attention to detail is what we used to expect from everyone. Him and Gates, I wonder what would the world be like if one or the other hadn't existed; they drove each other.

I always wanted to get my hands on a NeXT box, didn't they eventually sell the O/S by itself? Although it would probably be sitting next to my Solaris, Xenix and tons of Netware disks, I saw three 6.22 DOS disks the other day, I seem to see them every couple of months and they seem to move on their own.

I wish he had done his macrobiotic diet while also following the Doctor's advice. I've known of a couple people who had the fast version of pancreatic cancer and they are still alive after five years for the longest and she had the slow one.

What do you think will the impact be for Apple, has it been felt already? MS could use Gates, Ballmer just didn't seem to get it. I don't know how much Gates is still involved though. I was working on 7 and 8 side by side for a good friend a week or two ago and the big changes aren't what amuse me, it's the small stuff they changed that makes no sense. Like Office going to the 'Ribbon' interface; I can see change for improvement sake but hiding things or moving them is dumb. I didn't know they'd bought Nokia, and here they were in the Star Trek reboot although it was an alternate universe.

It is pronounced OS TEN, not OS EX, as some people think, and I heard some Best Buy sales guy arguing the other day.

Funny, I thought it was the other way around, I stand corrected although is there anything a Best Buy salesman doesn't know, how could he be wrong?

I like the cat names. Yosemite sounds like an MS pre-release name, before they spend millions on a study and come up with Vista. I'm dealing with an extremely verticle software company and they're tech support is busy guiding people off of XP. Funny, they should just give them the reg hack that makes it think it's server 2003 or the embedded one and still get updates. XP is a perfect example of a name not meaning much when talking about quality although it's supposed to stand for experience or something like it.

304 posted on 07/21/2014 9:11:59 PM PDT by Lx (Do you like it? Do you like it, Scott? I call it, "Mr. & Mrs. Tenorman Chili.")
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To: Lx
Re grudge. And much healthier. I learned that after my infarction 16 years ago. Grin.

Re lunch. Let's make it happen, if not dinner with our ladies.

Re: the one you had. . . If it was Bondi Blue could have been as low as MacOS.8.1 as that was the one of the Gumdrop Macs G3 shipped with first. But they'd even run up to MacOS9.1 (not 9.2, that was for a Mac that had EFI) and OSX.3.9 Panther. . . and some of the later ones shipped with 9.1 and could go to OSX.4.3 Tiger.

Re NeXT did sell the NeXTStep Openstep software for OEM installation on PC, Indigo, and even heavy duty Mac boxes, plus any UNIX boxes from 1993 to its sale to Apple in 1997. I drooled over one but the $20,000 price tag, and toy status for me was too great.

I was doing a lot a graphic art work on an Amiga 3000 at the time using a program called PageStream. . . Blew Illustrator, photoshop, Printshop, and QuarkExpress out of the water. It did everything in one package from graphic manipulation to pre-press including color separations, masking, half-tones, text entry, editing, character manipulation (twist, turn, spin, image fill, translucency, cut-out, fades), dye-process, everything you could imagine and some you couldn't, better than the separate apps in Mac or PC. . . and here's the kicker. It was developed by ONE GUY, Deron Kazmaier, working sixty miles from the nearest paved road (as he puts it "in the high plains of North Dakota"), where he lived with his wife, sixteen sled-dogs, a generator, and several computers so he could make it cross platform! It ran on Atari ST, Amiga, PCs, Mac, Linux, and some weird OS in Great Britain! He'd take a two month break from coding every year to train for and race the Iditerod! Would you believe he's STILL updating and supporting it?! He now supports Amiga, Mac OSX, Linux, and Windows.

Lx, in the older version, PageStream supported document to 2000 feet in size! If you could find a printer that large, it'd print it. If you couldn't, it would tile 8.5" x 11" prints and you could paste it up. In color. Lol! I've designed building projects in it! Accuracy to .000" in drawing, math aware input editing, with complex formulae, including vector drawing. Fontography, to .000 point. Love this program. Not too steep of a learning curve.

Unfortunately, my graphic arts business dried up as people learned they could turn out "ransom note" flyers and newsletters in Microsoft Word. . . and I lost interest in publishing (and the time to do it properly). Their work looked horrid, but they liked it. . .

Besides, I made lots of money cleaning up after them. The amateur fonts the sent to the printers invariably screwed up the printer's computers after uploading a few too many modified Helveticas and Times Romans that had been, shall we say, tweaked, by Joe Blow font monger, with the fancy newly Script font pasted into their metrics? That just help grow the other side of my consulting business. . . and I picked up some of my publishing competitors to network their businesses, as well as clean up their messy font collections.

One of my magazine publisher clients called me two hours before they had to hand carry the cartridge HD with that month's issue to the printer. The typesetter/graphic artist had accepted a last minute ad from a long time advertiser who had his secretary "whip the ad out" in her copy of some DTP. He had a custom font he'd had a high school buddy of his son design for his company logo he insisted on using. The guy dropped the ad into the space they were holding, dropped the font into the font folder, tweaked the sizes to fit, then saved the file. (No backup, of course!) and went to lunch. Deadline to leave the editing office was 3:00PM.

At 1:00 I got a frantic call. After getting back from lunch, the graphics guy, doing one more check, was horrified to find that ALL the body text was screwed up royally! Each character was separated from the next by several inches of blank space! There might be only three words on a page.

I got there by 1:30. I knew what was wrong. That "custom font," was a FrankenFont, made up of metrics borrowed from other fonts, with the coding left in place. Dropping the "custom font" into the regular font collection caused the correctly coded metrics to be replaced with the coding for FrankenFont, which in no way matched the size, kerning (the kid had no idea what kerning was), and hinting was. . . Oops!

Fixing it was not easy. . . Because the font they had laid the magazine out with—which they THOUGHT was legitimate—was itself, an amateur creation they'd picked up from an ad somewhere that had corrupted the legitimate Garamond! This meant that after replacing the offending font folder. . . and finding fonts for ALL the other ads. . . the layout of the body text was still screwed up.

60 some odd pages of text. . . Rekerning. Find widows and orphans. I know we missed some. I know the ligatures were all broken. . . and unfixed. But the drive with that month's magazine issue at 3:10.

I laid down the law. They bought the entire Adobe Font Suite $1800 per work station, IIRC. . . for every production computer. Accept an outside Ad? Fine. It's to produced on a QUARANTINED Mac. The ad is printed with the customer's supplied font as a high def image file. . . at an extra charge. . . and then the image only is exported to the magazine/newspaper/publication. The Quarantined Mac’s fonts folder is then NUKED! Rinse, repeat with the next outside ad. No custom font, no matter how cool is to ever be kept! NEVER allow any outside artwork with text onto the production computer, Mac or PC. THEY ARE POISON! I put a sticker just above the CD drive slot on the computers "NO UNAUTHORIZED FONTS ALLOWED!"

One week after I laid down this law, I was called back. A new graphic artist had installed his favorite "cool" fonts on all of the production computers and had already poisoned about half of the new Adobe fonts. "But they're so COOL!" This punk kid said. "The fonts on these computers were boring junk. You can download lots of better ones for free."

Sheesh. . . and they vote.

Word is that Steve had beaten the Cancer. . . but died rejecting the Liver transplant. I too wish he'd paid more attention to the doctors. . . but doctors can be deadly too.

Apple has already taken the hit of Steve Jobs' loss. Tim Cook was actually running Apple for the two years before Steve's death. Steve was acting mostly as an advisor.

Microsoft irritated so many power users with stupid changes in the interface to Microsoft Word. Use a seldom used feature and it's suddenly on the ribbon. Old stand-byes are moved to obscure locations. Mail merge changed so that old merged files such as mailing labels don't merge the same and can't be properly edited, keyboard short-cuts are arbitrarily changed for no discernible sane reason (that drove touch typists up-the-proverbial-wall). Some body needed to be at the helm, a Steve Jobs like leader, to tell MS that change is not to be made for change's sake, and there must be a hell of a good reason to make the change. Steve Balmer wasn't it. . . and should not have been kept at the helm for as long as he was. We Mac users used to facetiously hope they'd keep him around "as long as it takes" for him to run Microsoft into the ground. He may have done it.

I doubt bringing Gates back in an active management position would do much good, now. In my opinion, Gates was not much of a tech genius. He was an opportunist. (as, in a sense was Steve Jobs. . . but Steve Jobs had taste and a madness lacked by Gates.) Gates' talent was seeing the work of others and grabbing it for Microsoft. . . after sometimes filing the serial numbers off. . . beginning with DOS itself. Then add things like Disk Doubler, stolen from Disk Stacker, graphical user windows codes grabbed while working under contract from Apple to make Office for Mac, the GUI for Windows 95 itself from Apple, Windows Media Player which was found to include Apple's QuickTime code in its entirety (including markers such as an Apple engineer's social security number, his mother's maiden name, etc., imbedded in the code) which resulted in the infamous so-called $150 million bail-out of Apple by Microsoft in 1997, which was actually part of a multi-billion dollar patent and copyright lawsuit settlement Steve Jobs negotiated with Gates to avoid a protracted court trial which would have given MS a huge black eye and an even larger dollar loss.

305 posted on 07/22/2014 11:50:27 AM PDT by Swordmaker (This tag line is a Microsoft insult free zone... but if the insults to Mac users continue...)
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