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    <title>dekstop weblog : Visiting Old Friends: Back on Windows, for Now</title>
    <link>http://dekstop.de/weblog/2006/03/visiting_old_friends/</link>
    <description>Last April, nearly exactly a year ago, I bought my first Mac (a 12&quot; Powerbook), and after a while that became the only machine I use. There are at least two working PCs in this appartment that by now are only used as storage medium or by visitors. This last ...</description>
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    <dc:rights>Copyright 2006 Martin Dittus</dc:rights>
    <lastBuildDate>Sat, 25 Mar 2006 18:22:12 GMT</lastBuildDate>
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      <title>Visiting Old Friends: Back on Windows, for Now</title>
      <link>http://dekstop.de/weblog/2006/03/visiting_old_friends/</link> 
      <description><![CDATA[<p>Last April, nearly exactly a year ago, I bought my first Mac (a 12" Powerbook), and after a while that became the only machine I use. There are at least two working PCs in this appartment that by now are only used as storage medium or by visitors.</p>

<p>This last Wednesday I had to send the Powerbook in for repair (with a broken battery and CD drive), so I had to dig out the old Thinkpad as temporary replacement. And now I'm surprised at how fast habits change -- up until last year my main machines were always running Microsoft OSes, yet I can't bear the thought of having to go back. I even briefly pondered getting a Mac mini as temporary work environment, and if I had the money I'd probably have bought one.</p>

<p>The last days back on Windows have been an eye-opener on several levels.</p>

<p>During the last year I seem to have lost the capability to fluently use a Windows keyboard. This mainly becomes apparent with shortcut keys/hotkeys -- I rely on a certain number of hotkeys for virtually every application I use, and having to think about what keys you have to press each time defies the value of a hotkey. But I guess it'll only take a while to get reacquainted. <em>(Hits Alt+S to save the document, realizes it's Ctrl+S now.)</em></p>

<p>Yet some things are not remedied so easily. E.g. I found that text selection really sucks on Windows -- you can't use the up/down cursor keys to select from cursor position to the start/end of a single-line text control (e.g., the address bar of a browser). There is no triple click to select a complete line. And Window's selection behavior when double clicking a word, cutting it and pasting it elsewhere is just silly. OS X in contrast does it elegantly, figures out how to properly handle surrounding spaces, and usually gets it right.</p>

<p>This might sound like a trivial bother, but it's severely affecting your workflow. It's a pain to have to go back to fix word spacing every time you move text around when you have used a system that does this work for you. And no wonder Firefox's developers chose to introduce the triple click to Windows users: It's too valuable a tool that you can deprive your users of it just because the OS doesn't support it by default.</p>

<p>Another thing I miss: Closing windows without closing the application. Never thought I'd miss that, but apparently I close and later re-open browser windows frequently enough that Firefox's startup time gets noticeable.</p>

<p>Then of course there's quite a list of OS-level tools that make life easier on the Mac -- the dictionary widget, automatic spell checking in most text controls, a real Unix shell, obviously. (Don't say Cygwin.)</p>

<p>And Exposé -- how would anyone use a window system without such a feature? <a href="http://spaces.msn.com/charaka/Blog/cns!2D05B54D4892E67D!1064.entry">Apparently</a> a similar function was in development at MS, but when they heard Apple announce it they scrapped it for fear of being called copycats. Bad call dudes.</p>

<p>I'm not saying that Macs are better. I'm simply surprised how fast you adapt to a new system to a degree where you stop being able to use the old one.</p>]]></description>
      <dc:creator>Martin Dittus</dc:creator>
      <category>stuff</category>
      
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      <pubDate>Sat, 25 Mar 2006 18:22:12 GMT</pubDate>
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