Love hate relationship with Mac OS
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
@Dashrender said:
Does the lack of extensions lead to the problem of not being able to find things?
Not for me, searching by file type instead of file name is way more powerful.
I'm lost, you say not for you, but then you say searching by file name is powerful - so wouldn't you say yes you have problems because MAC doesn't save things with file extensions? or does MAC now use file extensions?
Mac does not use file extensions, no UNIX does. The idea of file extensions are unique to Windows and are a holdover from DOS, it's a sad, sad, way to handle file data. I didn't say that searching by filename was powerful, I said that file type was.
How do you search by file type if not by extension?
Yeah, wrote the wrong word... filename instead of file type.
Extensions are just part of the name and tell us nothing. You can name a Word document with .jpg and Windows will think that it is an image because it is confusing the name of a thing with the type of a thing. To all other operating systems, they actually look at the binary headers of the files and determine what they actually are, it's actually looking at what the file is. There is no connection, not a direct one anyway, between a file name (extension) and type, that's a human thing that has to be maintained and is not reliable and breaks all standard good practices in data storage. It's a kludge that shouldn't exist.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Extensions are just part of the name and tell us nothing. You can name a Word document with .jpg and Windows will think that it is an image because it is confusing the name of a thing with the type of a thing. To all other operating systems, they actually look at the binary headers of the files and determine what they actually are, it's actually looking at what the file is. There is no connection, not a direct one anyway, between a file name (extension) and type, that's a human thing that has to be maintained and is not reliable and breaks all standard good practices in data storage. It's a kludge that shouldn't exist.
OK I understand that - I wonder if MS just can't move to that situation, yet support the old style for backwards compatibility?
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@Dashrender said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Extensions are just part of the name and tell us nothing. You can name a Word document with .jpg and Windows will think that it is an image because it is confusing the name of a thing with the type of a thing. To all other operating systems, they actually look at the binary headers of the files and determine what they actually are, it's actually looking at what the file is. There is no connection, not a direct one anyway, between a file name (extension) and type, that's a human thing that has to be maintained and is not reliable and breaks all standard good practices in data storage. It's a kludge that shouldn't exist.
OK I understand that - I wonder if MS just can't move to that situation, yet support the old style for backwards compatibility?
You can "have" both but it would cause conflicts and confusion. Windows users aren't good with change and this is a thirty year backlog of "this is how we've always done it." Just look at your response, you accidentally mixed the worlds extension and type because, I presume, in your mind they are so linked that it is surprising to find that they are different things. If you grow up in Windows this can happen. That's a lot of people to retrain in a pretty invasive way.
And yet, it is one of those things that the UNIX users like to point out about just how surprisingly more easy Linux is to use, even for desktop use.
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I know the difference between filename and file type. That was just me being in a hurry. That said, I'll agree that most users of Windows wouldn't know the difference.
I guess I like the human factor that file extensions provide that missing them looses. If I'm on a unix system and look at a file called command I can't tell by looking at it if it's an executable, text file, Word document, etc. I'm sure there are tools in unix that will tell me that, but just doing a list - are there arguments that will tell me?
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@scottalanmiller said:
Windows users aren't good with change and this is a thirty year backlog
I use both Macs and Windows. And have for a long time but I've always had a file management problem on Macs. I think this is also and issue on macs they don't want to change the OS they've built up, they've taken Unix and thrown so much stuff on top of it that it makes it hard to work.
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@Dashrender said:
I know the difference between filename and file type. That was just me being in a hurry.
Or it was Freudian?
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@JasonNM said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Windows users aren't good with change and this is a thirty year backlog
I use both Macs and Windows. And have for a long time but I've always had a file management problem on Macs. I think this is also and issue on macs they don't want to change the OS they've built up, they've taken Unix and thrown so much stuff on top of it that it makes it hard to work.
And HFS+ just sucks too. It is a ridiculous filesystem. Linus was ranting about that recently.
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@RojoLoco said:
I have NEVER been able to wrap my head around why it is (and has been for 2 decades) considered the de facto choice for "professional" audio/video production. I've been multi-tracking on PC since the 90s, never had issues.
It's not as popular now, there used to be times when Mac made sense and you'd be insane to choose windows over it for video or audio work because windows used to suck at font rendering, graphics and audio drivers compared to Macs OSes video drivers and coreAudio. But, now days Adobe software works better on windows, Final Cut Pro 7 went to the consumer grade Final Cut Pro X. and Avid media composer and Avid Pro Tools works better on windows than it does on Mac (not that it works that great on either). Avid even choose to use windows computers for their live audio sound boards, not mac mini's. That shows who they think they work better.
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@Dashrender said:
I guess I like the human factor that file extensions provide that missing them looses. If I'm on a unix system and look at a file called command I can't tell by looking at it if it's an executable, text file, Word document, etc. I'm sure there are tools in unix that will tell me that, but just doing a list - are there arguments that will tell me?
They don't tell you in Windows either. In Windows the file extension is normally hidden so you have no idea without taking an extra step. And the extension might be wrong or be any of a number of things (jpg, JPG, jpeg) instead of just one. In UNIX you can test any single file using the file command.
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@JasonNM said:
@RojoLoco said:
I have NEVER been able to wrap my head around why it is (and has been for 2 decades) considered the de facto choice for "professional" audio/video production. I've been multi-tracking on PC since the 90s, never had issues.
It's not as popular now, there used to be times when Mac made sense and you'd be insane to choose windows over it for video or audio work because windows used to suck at font rendering, graphics and audio drivers compared to Macs OSes video drivers and coreAudio. But, now days Adobe software works better on windows, Final Cut Pro 7 went to the consumer grade Final Cut Pro X. and Avid media composer and Avid Pro Tools works better on windows than it does on Mac (not that it works that great on either). Avid even choose to use windows computers for their live audio sound boards, not mac mini's. That shows who they think they work better.
Like I said, been using PC over mac for those specific applications since the late 90s, which was when it all became even. Mac OS and Pro tools can still kiss my ass, I never believed the hype about "it's what professionals use".
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I think it remains really popular with "entry level" AV people, not the full timers, not the high end shops, it is used there too but I think its big market is heavy saturation in the people who do it at home, as a hobby or are just getting into it. Once you get to the big shops I think you see that drop off and become a secondary player to Windows rather than the market leader. My view of that market is limited but it makes sense and that is what I've seen.
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I've never really had a problem getting my way around Mac or Windows (or Linux, for that matter)... I like using a file extension because to my eyes it makes more sense.... and also in Pretty mcuh every OS, your file's icon will look similar to the application that is supposed to open it. That helps too.
I prefer operating on EXT* or NTFS file systems because they are more easily recoverable in most situations. I've crashed my Mac more times than I care to count and had to resort to a full restore via Time Machine because the partition was so corrupted...
It does happen in Windows and Linux, but I am usually able to at least recover my files in case of disaster.
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I prefer XFS to the EXT family in most cases.
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@scottalanmiller said:
I think it remains really popular with "entry level" AV people, not the full timers, not the high end shops, it is used there too but I think its big market is heavy saturation in the people who do it at home, as a hobby or are just getting into it. Once you get to the big shops I think you see that drop off and become a secondary player to Windows rather than the market leader. My view of that market is limited but it makes sense and that is what I've seen.
Pixar, Provient etc etc standardize on the HP z8xx line. Though with HPs cut in jobs and service who knows where the market will go. If dell actually made their precision lines with higher quality like HP rather than just making them high-end components with the same build quality of the optiplex line it would be a great opportunity for them.
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@scottalanmiller I don't recall ever having to attempt to recover anything from XFS... What are the differences (block size, architecture, etc)... and are there any Linux distros that actually default to XFS?
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@dafyre said:
@scottalanmiller I don't recall ever having to attempt to recover anything from XFS... What are the differences (block size, architecture, etc)... and are there any Linux distros that actually default to XFS?
The big ones, RHEL/CentOS and OpenSuse are XFS by default.
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Well, that's interesting. I never knew they had made the switch. (Been out of the active Linux world for far, far too long.
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@dafyre said:
Well, that's interesting. I never knew they had made the switch. (Been out of the active Linux world for far, far too long.
XFS has been the Linux standard more or less across the board, if any such thing exists in the Linux world, for about two years. It was starting to be recommended for "non-boot drives" even earlier.
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My 2 cents. I use Alfred, which has searching for File Name, and file content. Also, I put everything in my Documents folder and just do my best to keep it well organized so I can find anything.
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@scottalanmiller Just checked one of my recent Fedora installs and it does indeed use XFS... learn something new every day, lol.