Apr 17

I don't mean to rant but the Finder in OS X really does not work well. I'm an Apple fan, and I appreciate the technology but sometimes you see the lame engineering hiding in fancy eye candy and think, so what? It's not enough to rest on your laurels, Apple. The Finder is busted, plain and simple.

Far from being the elegant, sophisticated filing system that gets work done, it consistently presents barriers to moving data around. It does this by nature of the GUI, the way your locational awareness must transit multiple levels in a mechanical and time consuming fashion to move information around.

Certainly you can do this by opening two windows and dragging them back and forth. Or you could get in the terminal and type something out that a few mouse gestures should accomplish. It's more than frustrating, it's a barrier to being productive because your spending too much time focusing your way through endless levels of directories when you just want to see two at once to copy things between them.

Or move seamlessly between levels or on the same level.

Let's take a Finder window and do this. Put it in column view and try to scroll all the way to the left.

It looks like this:

Finder Blue Side Bar

I mean look at this big blue thing? What's it there for, I don't know. Some kind of blue beastie that gives no clues where the objects on it live. And worse, the root directory is cut off from the file system.

Duh! Not really. Apple just wants to confuse the heck out of you so you'll buy more of their product. A slight sense of confusion in the consumer promotes a sense of identity loss, of an empty hollow place inside that comes from technology with senseless interface tweaks.

Yes, this is weird. Here's some more weird stuff. I can't click down on the white spaces and simply mouse-drag the whole shebang sideways.

I can't create a dual view so I can move stuff back and forth between directories.

I can't easily see two places at once to copy between them.

I have to traverse the file system level by level by double clicking on folders that make me have to keep track of where I am in the hierarchy all the time, so I can then traverse back down it again, level by level, or open a new window and do it again.

Even worse, most of the time my applications don't remember where I was just working, or worse where they just saved a file, what place in the hierarchy.

Now, I'd be first to admit that technology can lots of effort to develop and fine tune. But, the Finder's interface development has been notably short-sighted in Apple's case. They've focused on the eye candy, and on specific tactical advantages in media, production, creativity and a stable platform to produce all kinds of cool stuff. And all the action takes place in the applications. The Finder is like a dead zone where mouse clicks go to die. The shortest way between me and my destination is the best way.

Finder, you really don't get it.

OS X Snow Leopard Finder
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Jun 05

Today I’m updating my social networking sites, apparently a new ritualistic behavior of technologically minded computer users all over the planet. Here my Technorati Profile.

I’ve been studying Internet marketing with an eye to improving my profile on the the Intertubes.

I’ve learned that you have to make a Really Big Offer, using lots of bullet points and testimonials, plus every other paragraph has to list 4 things you Can’t Do Without.

Don’t get me started on PPC and opt-in boxes.

It’s kind of fun when you start learning about it. Just like computers, the alternative is to feel hopeless outdated or behind the curve on this stuff when you suddenly run up against the ubiquity of these tools in daily business activities.

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May 21

More consulting odysseys:

Vicomsoft servers for small companies
IPNetRouter servers for distributing Internet traffic for a small company
Fax Servers for small companies
SIMS/Communigate Pro Mail servers
Apple Mail Servers
EIMS Mail servers
FTP Servers for photographers, videographers and prepress operations.
Firewall hardware and software
Software RAID systems for redundant file service protection
Hardware RAID systems for redundant file service plus fast file access
Backup systems of all stripes, shapes and colors from mirrored RAID systems to single user backup duplicates
Retrospect, Retrospect, Retrospect, Retrospect
Mail configuration, browser configuration, modem configuration, Internet configuration
Broadband installations from A to Z: install, diagnosis, testing, upgrades
Hardware, hardware, hardware, hardware.
Wireless networks
Troubleshooting networks of all shapes, sizes and dimensions
File service, file hosting, file servers
Files, files, files, files: where are they, what are they, why is it corrupted/broken/missing
Credit card servers
Data base servers from within a LAN
Remote access to LAN from the Internet
Remote access to servers, workstations
Tutoring, training, demonstrations, creating guidelines, FAQ’s and howto’s
Now Up to Date Servers, Filemaker Servers, Calendar Servers, Font Servers, Backup Servers, ASIP servers
ASIP, ASIP, ASIP, ASIP
Net booting of high school library computers (60)
Lab setup of elementary school iMacs to rewrite hard drives each night to a template hard drive to prevent corruption or student changes
Moving individuals to entire companies from OS 9 to OS X.
Moving a publishing company from Pagemaker/OS 9 to OS X/Adobe Creative Suite in the lull between their monthly editions. Install backup server plus font server.
Install numerous sharing routers.
Fix glitches, fix corrupted files, fix drives that won’t boot.
Move data to new systems, migrate user files, copy stuff to new drives.
Red alert: corrupted hard drives, recover data, restore from backups.

And that’s just the easy stuff.

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May 21

Occasionally I like to look back at some of the things I’ve done as a consultant as a reminder of the cool stuff that can happen with Macs. It’s educational just to recall all the different scenarios and how they were made to work.

One time I supported a 45 user company in the pre-press business, a graphic arts concern. They were hired by a large, very well known company to do their pre-press work which meant growing the company by about 50 new employees. This meant planning, budgeting, ordering, and installing workstations and servers to meet this new demand.

We had some weeks in the planning process before doing the installations, which happened in a 30-day period.

We ordered 30 G4 wind tunnel Macs, 15 Dell workstations, 2 Xserves, 1 terabyte RAID, a 20 cartridge DDS library backup system, plus new ethernet switches, a Watchguard firewall and Adobe, Office and miscellaneous software. Spent about 145k.

The network environment had the working files hosted live on grey G4 towers with ultra-scsi drives. We migrated this data to an XServe connected to the new RAID via fiber optic.

I set up a new Extensis Font Reserve server for hosting fonts for the entire company. Retrospect server was installed on a spare PC to run the library backup system.

The Watchguard Firefox was installed. I loved this box because it would display firewall activity and connections in real time on a piece of software running on a PC.

Then we had to get all the software installed, get the users up and running and the network configured. After that was all done, the hard stuff began.

The new client wanted to bring in a T1 private line so the graphic artists would connect to their private pre-press system via this new bandwidth. A new Cisco was delivered and placed on the Watchguard’s DMZ port. A static route was configured to the Cisco and all was good.

But wait, more had to be done. The graphic artists used a browser to connect to the client’s web servers, which used an authentication module at the front-end. This module was dependent on successful DNS resolution to work correctly.

Since it was a private T1 line, the servers on the far end did not resolve correctly. The IP addresses were all private, non-routable addresses. So, we installeda DNS server on 24-hour notice to provide DNS resolution so that computers on the LAN could resolve these private servers to domain names correctly.

It all worked! One of the highlights of my consulting experiences.

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May 21

Occasionally I like to look back at some of the things I’ve done as a consultant as a reminder of the cool stuff that can happen with Macs. It’s educational just to recall all the different scenarios and how they were made to work.

One time I supported a 45 user company in the pre-press business, a graphic arts concern. They were hired by a large, very well known company to do their pre-press work which meant growing the company by about 50 new employees. This meant planning, budgeting, ordering, and installing workstations and servers to meet this new demand.

We had some weeks in the planning process before doing the installations, which happened in a 30-day period.

We ordered 30 G4 wind tunnel Macs, 15 Dell workstations, 2 Xserves, 1 terabyte RAID, a 20 cartridge DDS library backup system, plus new ethernet switches, a Watchguard firewall and Adobe, Office and miscellaneous software. Spent about 145k.

The network environment had the working files hosted live on grey G4 towers with ultra-scsi drives. We migrated this data to an XServe connected to the new RAID via fiber optic.

I set up a new Extensis Font Reserve server for hosting fonts for the entire company. Retrospect server was installed on a spare PC to run the library backup system.

The Watchguard Firefox was installed. I loved this box because it would display firewall activity and connections in real time on a piece of software running on a PC.

Then we had to get all the software installed, get the users up and running and the network configured. After that was all done, the hard stuff began.

The new client wanted to bring in a T1 private line so the graphic artists would connect to their private pre-press system via this new bandwidth. A new Cisco was delivered and placed on the Watchguard’s DMZ port. A static route was configured to the Cisco and all was good.

But wait, more had to be done. The graphic artists used a browser to connect to the client’s web servers, which used an authentication module at the front-end. This module was dependent on successful DNS resolution to work correctly.

Since it was a private T1 line, the servers on the far end did not resolve correctly. The IP addresses were all private, non-routable addresses. So, we installeda DNS server on 24-hour notice to provide DNS resolution so that computers on the LAN could resolve these private servers to domain names correctly.

It all worked! One of the highlights of my consulting experiences.

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