Mac Indie Software Pet Peeves

This applies to software distributed on compressed disk images, which includes most indie software. It excludes software distributed on disk images that are then compressed, only because this annoying behavior is thankfully uncommon. I’m talking here about things that I see frequently.

Finder’s toolbar is hidden

The most convenient access to the Applications folder is almost always going to be the toolbar or the sidebar. The user is usually going to want to put your app somewhere, and most of the time, the disk image has a background image telling you to put it in your Applications folder. Which the software vendor has conveniently not given you access to. The most obvious workaround to this is to show the toolbar, which leads us to…

Window looks like crap with sidebar

Finder only stores one window size; the with- size. If a window doesn’t have a with- size, Finder guesses what you want — and if your Finder has the sidebar, and mine has for some time now, it guesses wrong. It adds the sidebar to whatever you’ve already got, throwing out whatever doesn’t fit. This blows the careful layout of the disk image, frequently hiding the damned application. The one I’m still trying to drag to my Applications folder.

I guess one is forgivable, but not both. Sure, I might be one of the eleven users with a convenient alias to the Applications folder, or think dragging the application, whacking my _show desktop_ Exposé key, hovering on my hard drive icon, waiting for its window to spring open, and then finally dropping on the actual Applications folder is easier…but I’m not, and I don’t think that’s unusual. Plus, if someone is horrified by the sidebar and instantly hides it, Finder obviously gets that right.

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Crash Course

It snowed here Sunday evening, and since we spend Christmas morning with L’s parents and the evening with mine, we had to drive through it.

It wasn’t a note-worthy drive because it was the first snow — that happened weeks ago. It wasn’t snowing especially hard, the roads weren’t glassed over with ice, and you could generally see things farther away than your hood ornament when you looked out the window.

So, why blog about unremarkable snow? Because people can’t drive. There were at least four accidents that featured cars with the headlights no longer pointed forward, and at least one case of tires not pointed down. You would think that, living in Michigan, people wouldn’t be flying off of the road like they’re giving out free t-shirts every time it snows. Okay, I would think that. I _do_ think that, in fact — even though I’ve been living here a while.

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