DevTools are on the same disc (at least in the DVD distribution, which is all there is unless you send away for a CD version), but you install them after OS X.William Wallet wrote:I seriously don't recall seeing any real options or anything. Heck there wasn't even a choice to include developer stuff (I wouldn't have picked it anyway, but I noticed the lack of this option).
Now that I think about it, isn't that on a seperate disc? Oh well.
I can always install again (not that it'd achieve anything) but I dunno.
Heh, you've done it 50 times and you still can't get it right?
I know you're joking, but I want to clarify for the benefit of the onlookers: during my ADC membership, I got about a disc per month and a half with a new beta build of OS X on it, sometimes with other downloadable versions along the way. Every one of those got its own install—Apple does not (for good reason) try to support upgrading from one beta build to another. Nothing about the installs were mandated (say, by a non-functional system) save the fact that the previous install had become obsolete.
Just jokes, look - if it all works in your experience then good for you. But my first touch of OSX has left me a little burned to be honest - it seems to run a little faster (which I'm used to, being an OS9 user anyway) and there are some user interface things that I dig, but on the whole it feels homogenised.
I can see that. First time I used OS X, I absolutely loathed it. Booted right back into OS 9 and stayed there for four months. Of course, it didn't help that OS X was brand new at the time and just about anything I wanted to run was running in Classic anyway—I didn't gain anything by going OS X. Eventually, though, the technical superiority became more compelling than the unfamiliarity. How extensively have you used OS X, out of interest?
I reckon, as much as 10.4 is giving me the redarse, we may have to stick with it - but now pursue some way of getting some of that 3GB back. I mean it still seems a much of a muchness there.
The low-hanging fruit, as I mentioned, is /Library/Printers . Some other things, like the Garageband Demo Songs (and indeed, Garageband itself if you don't use it) are also good places to start. If you really want to get into the thick of things, you can remove program internationalizations by control-clicking on an application, selecting "View Package Contents", then opening the "Resources" folder in the Contents folder in the resulting window. You'll find a bunch of folders with endings ".lproj"—feel free to trash anything for languages you won't be using the programs in.
And I don't care how stable, fashionable, useful, whatever 10.4 is... I can't see any of this justifying the removal of Quick Time Pro and the installation of a crippled version of Quick Time 7. I am unimpressed.
While Quicktime 7 requires reregistration, there is a download available to revert to Quicktime 6 for those who want to keep Pro and not shell out again. I agree they should have handled it better (like making the upgrade one of the optional parts of the install), but given how much they redid the codebase I can understand it being a paid upgrade.
~J