I've managed to get two weeks under my belt running Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard on
my Late 2008 Unibody
MacBook without reverting to good old dependable OS X 10.5 Leopard, but it's been
very tempting to switch back at times - which would be simple, because
I still have Leopard installed on another hard drive partition
(see the links at the end of this article for more on
partitioning).
After a few days running version 10.6.2, I installed the 10.6.3 v1.1
update, but I noticed no resolution of OS 10.6's troublesome issues and
angularities.
A Nasty Input Bug
One really nasty bug that has manifested sporadically through the
two week stretch - twice in clusters of two within an hour or so of
each other - is that keyboard response just dies for no obvious
reason,- strangely at times afflicting both the built-in and external
keyboards and sometimes the peripheral keyboard only.
Likewise, pointing device response is erratic when this happens, or
one device craps out while others keep working, although thankfully at
least one of the three external mice and the built-in trackpad have
always remained functional, so one can save/close documents and shut
things down in an orderly fashion before rebooting, which is the only
remedy for the keyboard outage I've discovered so far. It's extremely
annoying and appears to possibly have something to do with switching
Spaces and cutting and pasting data.
Tex-Edit Plus Gets Stuck
Other odd glitches crop up randomly. The other evening, the cursor
icon in Tex-Edit Plus got "stuck" in the little "wristwatch" mode, even
though no processes were underway. Quitting the program (which required
using Force Quit,
since neither the Apple Menu nor the Dock quit commands would work)
restored normal behavior. Tex-Edit Plus is a Carbon app that runs
using OS X's Rosetta
translator, whose performance has deteriorated substantially in Snow
Leopard compared with Leopard and earlier versions.
Note that I'm using a clean install of Snow Leopard on a previously
vacant-of-operating-systems hard drive partition, although I did import
my user profile and settings from OS X 10.5 on the other
partition.
WindowShade X on 10.6
One significant development since my last report is that Unsanity
Software finally released a Snow Leopard compatible version of WindowShade X last week.
WSX version 5 (a 5.0.2 bug fix update was released on Friday) is a paid
upgrade with a 33% discount offered for registered users who purchased
WSX after August 28, 2009. Full price is $15.
WSX 5 requires Snow Leopard, although Version 4.3 remains available
if you are running OS X 10.5 (download link). That
version is now unsupported, but your currently valid registration code
will continue to work with older releases of WSX.
I had already got hold of the latest Application Enhancer and WSX v5
betas, which were downloaded from links available by becoming a
follower of Unsanity Software's
Twitter account. They installed smoothly and seemed to work fine,
so I initially thought happy days were here again.
A Problem with WSX
However, after a few hours I discovered that the Bold, Underline,
and Italic commands had quit working in text entry supporting
applications - at least in Tex-Edit Plus, TextEdit, and Thunderbird -
which was too crippling to live with. Uninstalling APE and WSX and then
rebooting restored normal text formatting behavior.
I was optimistic that this bug would be squashed in the final
release, but disappointingly it hasn't been so far (up to version
5.0.2). I would be very interested in learning whether this glitch is
idiosyncratic to my rig and setup, or if others have encountered it as
well. It certainly makes WSX unusable, although the windowshading and
other functions appear to work fine, and WSX/APE are once again
uninstalled.
Minimize to Dock Icon
In the meantime, reader John from Scotland suggested I try Snow
Leopard's "Minimize to Dock Icon" feature, of which I had previously
been unaware (it's new with Snow Leopard). That sent me scurrying to
David Pogue's Mac OS X
Snow Leopard: The Missing Manual for full details. I've got to
admit that it's a pretty cool enhancement, and it removes one of my
biggest objections to collapsing open windows to the Dock - the
crowding factor with an array of tiny, indistinguishable document icons
- and which with the associated Dock Exposé feature may
finally win even me over to using Exposé, which up to now I've
never warmed to.
In fact, I'm beginning to think that when used in conjunction with
Spaces, I may even like
"Minimize to Dock Icon" better than windowshading in some ways. Maybe
the old dog can learn some new muscle memory tricks.
I agree with John's philosophical view that it's best to get along
with as few system add-ons as possible, so given the continued text
editing issue with WindowShade X, I'm going to be obliged to give
"Minimize to Dock Icon" a good shot, and maybe it will finally wean me
off WindowShade X, as a must-have at least - although I still
think the windowshading concept is excellent and more convenient/useful
for some things, especially for quickly clearing the deck to see what's
behind your window.
Launching Tex-Edit Plus Documents
On another front, for my problem with getting Tex-Edit Plus
documents to open in TE+ on Finder double-click, the cure proved
absurdly simple. I just opened Get Info on a text document that had
been created in TE+, went to the Open With section, selected
Tex-Edit Plus from the pulldown menu, and then clicked the "Use this
application to open all documents like this one" box and "Change All"
button. Problem solved. All my TE+ documents now open in TE+ on
double-click.
However, reader Sam observes that while this is a functional
workaround, "the problem that underlies it is much broader," noting
that
"in 10.6, Apple dropped support for 'creator codes'
which allow an application to 'own' a document that it had created.
This document would always open in that application. Newer applications
have been updated to work with the new way of doing things, but older
apps (not just Carbon apps or ones compiled for PowerPC) aren't
designed to work without them."
Snow Leopard Is Not a 'Must Have' Upgrade
The biggest advantage I've realized in continuing to use Snow
Leopard is that I'm no longer locked out of Snow Leopard-only
applications, such as
MacSpeech Scribe, but if you're not being inhibited from running
your desired software in Leopard, I wouldn't recommend bothering with
Snow Leopard until you have some compelling reason to, although -
especially if you're not a WindowShade X user - Minimize to Dock
Icon is 10.6's closest thing to a must-have feature in my
estimation.
However, Snow Leopard's instability issues are a major pain, and my
continued perseverance is more in the interest of research than
preference.
More on Partitioning from Low End
Mac