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If i cut a different object without executing a paste command from a previous cut, the os should fuggetaboutit and work with me. no corruption, no lost files, just don't do anything and move on.
So, you're talking about the implementation I mentioned earlier where it places the file back where it was originally. This is inconsistent. If you cut text, then cut some other text, does the original text get put back? No, it doesn't. That's not cut behavior.
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Or, dare I say it, let there be more than one clipboard. one for files, one for text. I have never lost a file in windows cutting it, not pasting it and then cutting text.
How about one for pictures? Movies too? That way, the clipboard isn't interoperable at all. No thanks. One clipboard. Consistency.
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As far as draggin the item on to the dock. Sure, i can do that. I actually use the voice commands over the dock.
You referred to a quick way to email a file, I just told you one. It's completely independent of any other use of the Dock and has nothing to do with voice launching. Drag the file you want to email over to the dock, exposing it, then drop onto Mail's icon. Instantly a new email is created with that file as an attachment. Is that not what you were looking for?
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I really dont want OS X windowfied, by that i mean all the crap that comes with windows as an os.
You mean like the interface and behavior?
If icon preview still isn't your piece of pie, how about using column view and looking in the information column? Or turning on the inspector (command-option-I) and simply clicking each file for which you want to see the preview (and make sure that the preview section is expanded)?
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I think everyone keeps refering to the dashboard mostly is because its not what people have been asking for. Yet thats all apple seems to be proud of.
Some people are really excited about it and it's only your impression that Dashboard is all that Apple is proud of when it comes to Tiger. Look at Apple's Mac OS X page, it's not just Dashboard. Lots of people focus in on it because it's a bright shiny interface item.
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Oh and spotlight, yay. I may be in the minority here, but i know where all my files are already.
Well, if you think Spotlight is only about finding files, then you missed the boat. It's an API that allows for extensible data searching. It can be anything. Emails, RSS news items, pictures, music (including ID3 tags), movies, chat conversations, web history, address book, calendar items, and on and on because it's extensible. The possibilities are endless. Then again, if you want to think of it just as file searching, well, then you're not taking advantage of your computer to the fullest.
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Except for specific frames in a 1500 frame animation, for you smart ass's waiting to pounce on that point. Spotlight isn't going to tell me anything about frame composition.
Yet. Given appropriate metadata labeling, it could.
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oh and it would be nice if the entire computer, hardware, OS, software was fully utilizing the 64 bit architecture it brags about. instead of a few parts and peices. I think apple is misleading when they describe their 64 bit architecture.
Take advantage of it how? I want specifics of how it won't be in Tiger.
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My biggest beef I guess is the open gl thing.
Sure, more efficient subsystems are always a welcome change.