Snow Leopard on a new retina-display MacBook Pro? Nuh uh
#1
Posted 14 June 2012 - 10:46 AM
#2
Posted 14 June 2012 - 11:46 AM
#3
Posted 14 June 2012 - 11:47 AM
#4
Posted 14 June 2012 - 11:51 AM
Wait... what?
- Hackintosh: 2.3GHz AMD Quad-Core/4GB RAM/multiple HDs/GeForce 8600 GTS w/256MB
- Verizon iPhone 4
- AppleTV (2nd Gen)
- 1TB Time Capsule
- 80GB iPod Classic
#5
Posted 14 June 2012 - 12:21 PM
#6
Posted 14 June 2012 - 12:52 PM
#7
Posted 14 June 2012 - 01:02 PM
JakeT, on 14 June 2012 - 12:52 PM, said:
Not asking in a confrontational way, but would you really, truly abandon the Mac and take up Windows or Linux? I hear these kinds of threats every so often and think "Yeah, sure you will." But maybe people really do it.
So, honestly, is a high-rez display and the lack of support for it in Snow Leopard enough for you to abandon the computer platform you've presumably been working on for years?
#8
Posted 14 June 2012 - 01:03 PM
I saw the MBPro today with retina, and to be honest, there are only a few apps that take advantage of it, and if you run an app that doesnt (Word, Dreamweaver, Pages) it looks like CRAP. It looks like an old worn out tv from the 70s it so blurry.
I think that is yet more evidence that Steve Jobs isn't around anymore.... he would have made the OS compensate the fonts... i mean seriously if you run an old app on a new retina display it looks hideous.
#11
Posted 14 June 2012 - 02:08 PM
#12
Posted 14 June 2012 - 02:21 PM
nmpike, on 14 June 2012 - 01:03 PM, said:
I saw the MBPro today with retina, and to be honest, there are only a few apps that take advantage of it, and if you run an app that doesnt (Word, Dreamweaver, Pages) it looks like CRAP. It looks like an old worn out tv from the 70s it so blurry.
I think that is yet more evidence that Steve Jobs isn't around anymore.... he would have made the OS compensate the fonts... i mean seriously if you run an old app on a new retina display it looks hideous.
The apps that don't take advantage of the new Retina display are not THAT bad. Yes, the fonts/window UI are not rendered perfectly, but everything is more than tolerable. I just cannot believe anyone would wait to buy this notebook until ALL the applications they use support the higher resolution. That is just plain silly. Most of the applications I use (i.e. not from Apple), do not take advantage of this new screen - but using the notebook is such a pleasure that I barely even notice the poorly rendered UI elements/fonts. This is one sweet machine and I KNOW anyone who gets to use one will be super happy with it. If you are so obtuse that every UI element on a computer be "perfect" then you should just stay off of computers in general. NOTHING in life is perfect - especially software UI - and that is how it should be. If life were full of perfection, there would be nothing to strive for. The bright side to this situation is that as time goes by, every app that is updated to use the screen will be one more thing to love about this notebook.
Lastly, this is anything BUT evidence of a decline since S.J. left this world. All this is, is a chicken before the egg scenario. Applications were not written to take advantage of screens with this high resolution, nor were they written to take advantage of the OS changes Apple made to Lion to enable this screen on the OS. Why would they? At the time they were written, these things did not exist! So now you have a screen that exists, but no software that works well with it (other than Apple's). It will take time for the application developers to incorporate these changes into their code. This screen (and the OS changes to enable it) was obviously kept fairly secret at Apple, so it is reasonable to assume the developers had no way to code for it until AFTER Apple released it.
This post has been edited by Macmuchmore: 14 June 2012 - 02:33 PM
#13
Posted 14 June 2012 - 02:25 PM
#14
Posted 14 June 2012 - 02:56 PM
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