Posts Tagged mac

Flash 10.1 to Bring Performance Upgrades to the Mac

I’ve only been using a Mac for about half a year now, although I’ve wanted one for quite a while longer. The performance, stability and flexibility of Unix combined with the elegance and ease-of-use for day-to-day tasks of Cocoa was a big draw to me. However, there has always been one thing I have been very, very not happy with on OS X, and that is the performance of Flash.

It’s not a lonely boat, either. Just a quick Google search turns up a whole bunch of people who are also unhappy with Flash’s performance on their Macs. But shining through the gray clouds is a ray of hope: Adobe promises that 10.1 will bring improvements. Ever the skeptic, I decided to try out the latest prerelease version* and see what there was to see.

Now, I will say that I currently use the Dev Channel version of Chrome–mostly because I don’t like Safari and Firefox eats memory like I eat spicy Cheetos… and I like my spicy Cheetos. (I’ve tried to like Opera, but I just can’t make myself. Sorry.) And Flash performance is far from stellar for me. When I’m browsing YouTube, I usually keep another tab open so I can read my RSS feeds, for instance, while the YouTube tab is completely unresponsive. When I create a bit.ly link, there is a noticeable delay after I click the "Shorten" button before I can select the new URL and copy it to the clipboard while the browser fires up the Flash on the page.

Short verdict? 10.1 is indeed faster.

The delay on bit.ly is all but gone, and browsing YouTube is as speedy as I could hope. I’m glad I installed the beta of 10.1, and I urge any of you readers who are fed up with Flash that is slow as… something that is the opposite of The Flash… to try it out.

 * Can’t promise this link will work after 10.1 is released.

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The Operating System Wars: Can’t We All Just Get Along?

software dreamland by ~lopagof at deviantART
smallsoftware dreamland by ~lopagof at deviantART

There are a lot of choices in the world of technology these days, and it doesn’t take a well-thought-out Google query to find a huge following of people on any side of any given topic. Of course, there isn’t a digital war older or that has resulted in more casualties than our old favorite, "Which operating system is better?"

Everyone has their personal preferences when it comes to pretty much anything tech-oriented–from our favorite browser to which phone we carry, it’s hard to find anyone who’s not willing to share an opinion. And, to be honest, since the operating system is the basic building block for our core computing experience, it makes sense that the choice would be a highly subjective one. But for the life of me I can’t seem to understand why people take their choice of operating system so personally. You can make fun of a man’s car, you can insult his clothes, you might even be able to get away with speaking poorly about his religion, but don’t you dare make fun of his choice of operating system, or you risk getting the top twenty reasons x is better than y, where x is his operating system and y is, invariably, yours.

I understand that every operating system has its pros and cons. I use Windows 7, OS X, and Linux all on an almost daily basis, and there are things that frustrate me about each of them. And, like any good geek, I have my druthers, give the choice of any of them. But I understand that each of them have strengths, and I’m not afraid to mix-and-match as needed. I use Windows 7 on my home desktop, where I browse the web and game from time to time. I run OS X on my laptop, which is my primary work machine, on which I do my software development. And Ubuntu powers the server on which this very site runs.

But this drive–especially from IT people–to turn their operating system preference into a dogma, and to argue with fervor only used elsewhere when dealing with religion and politics, is counter-intuitive to what we do. An operating system is a tool, not entirely unlike all the other tools we use on our computers–compilers, text editors, browsers–and to turn it into more than that is, in my opinion, only a hindrance to the betterment of the world of technology as a whole and our ability to think and adapt to various tools and resources as individuals. I’m not saying we all need to join hands and sing songs around the campfire and all install OS Winnux, but a little tolerance probably isn’t a bad thing.

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