Welcome, Guest | Home | Search | Login | Register
Author Article: Welcome to Bloat OS (Mac OS 9) (Read 17170 times)
Bolkonskij
Administrator
1024 MB
*****
Posts: 2023
View Profile Cornica - Video Entertainment for Mac OS users
on: September 20, 2021, 09:09

Found this article written in late 1999 when Apple had just released Mac OS 9. Albeit viewed from a different angle, it gives a good explanation for why we here love System 7 so much and prefer it over Mac OS 9. Read on, due to the length it's split across two posts. If you still have good ol' 90's attention span, grab a coffee and read :-)

------------------------------------------------

When I first installed my shiny new copy of Mac OS 9, I immediately noticed two things: scrolling through large windows in the Finder was noticeably slower, and applications opened up a little faster. The former, though it sounds bad, is in many cases a good thing: with the amazing speed of G3s and G4s, it's easy to fly past what you're looking for in the time it takes to click and release your mouse button.

Take a moment to think about that; it's pretty amazing. The hardware is so fast that the term "too fast" actually becomes, in this instance, not just possible, but a fact of life. And the hardware is by all clock speed, operations-per-second, and other such measurements far faster than the machines we were using just a few years ago.

Moving from a Centris 650 to a G3/400 gave me an eightfold increase in clock speed alone, not even considering the advantages of the G3 chip over a 68040, increased bus speed, a faster hard drive, graphics acceleration, ten times as much RAM,or a level 2 cache.

OK, enough awestruck praise. Because my cynical mind is starting to wonder so how come my G3 isn't even twice as fast as the Centris? For all the speed increases in the hardware, applications take longer to open,system startup time is still abysmal, the time it takes between hitting command-F and getting a Find window has actually increased significantly, and a machine that is supposedly capable of hundreds of thousands of calculations per second still takes over five seconds to calculate the size of my system folder.

In the case of applications, poor opening speed can't be blamed entirely, or even mostly, on the OS. The problem is in the applications themselves: Word 98, for example, takes significantly longer to open than good ol', does-what-you-want Word 5.1a. The way Microsoft decided to go in creating successive versions was to pack in more features, rather than optimize what they already had.

And, well, I dunno about you, but there's nothing Word 98 offers that 5.1 doesn't that I actually want, need, or, frankly, even like.

What I need is compatibility with what everyone else uses and if everyone else upgrades to 98, I'm stuck with it too unless I'm clever enough to graba copy of MacLink. (An awful program that performs a vital task with some to many errors, written by a company even less responsive to user feedback than FileMaker, and marred even further by a user interface that makes me wish for the ease-of-use of Windows NT but it has no competition, and is moderately better than opening the file with BBEdit and zapping gremlins)

So people run to the stores to upgrade, spending money for bloat: features they don't particularly need or want, at the expense of speed, which is to say, usability. In effect, software writers are filling up the time saved by faster processors by bloating up their software, so that in spite of huge speed increases in the hardware, the software, by and large, still crawls.

Sound familiar? I'm thinking about our beloved Mac OS now because Apple is doing the same thing Microsoft, and most other software companies, do they keep time (startup, program opening, finding) essentially constant across processors with tenfold speed differences.

They are so excited about new features, that they give no thought to optimizing old features, and it never occurs to anyone to ask whether the new features are worth their cost in speed. A computer today that does things at the same speed as a machine five years old isn't breaking even; it's taking a huge loss.

Apple loves Sherlock. And I have to admit, once I run all the (third-party, definitely not carrying the Apple seal of approval) patches to get rid of the non-standard UI and the flashy, annoying ad banners (you do realize you just paid $99 for the privilege of having a blinking billboard in your very own home, don't you?), I like Sherlock too. It doesn't offer anything particularly new: its Web searches are available from portals like hotbot.com, and have been since before Sherlock was a glimmer in Steve's eye.

The people-finding features go way back to the days of gopher. BBEdit (and, no doubt, some of the full-fledged word processors) has long had the ability to find by content, searching your drive for a snippet of text. CNET Shopper gives you shopping price comparisons. What Sherlock does is integrate these various functions into one convenient place.

A really great, "Why-didn't-anyone-think-of-this-before?" sort of idea. It performs all of its functions well (as well as, or even better than, the various individual programs / functions it combines), but not without cost. That cost is that it now takes significantly longer to just open up the Find dialog when you just want to look for a file on your hard drive.

Perhaps it's worth the price to you. But I, ever cynical, say Apple should have done better. In any of several possible ways:

- Keep the old Find command for finding things on your computer, and add Find By Content, making a new, separate application for Internet searches.

- Or: instead of making new ways to find different things, expand the capability of the basic Find command say, to allow the use of regular expressions.

- Or: keep Sherlock the way it is, but when a user hits Command-F, only load the application-finding program. Just like OS 7.x, it'll pop up instantly. If the user clicks on the shopping cart button, then you load that portion of the software that way, you won't cripple the basic function of finding an application in order to get the more advanced function of Internet finds.

(I think of Apple if this respect as very much like Microsoft, which went from making Help available, through a help viewer program, when you asked for it to making a dancing RAM-hogging animated help cartoon that appears whether you need it or not, demanding huge chunks of processor time so it can watch you type and interrupt your train of thought to offer unwanted advice.)

The third of those suggestions is the one you, dear reader(s, I hope!), will probably like best. Because it would require no sacrifice of anything you currently know and love about Sherlock. All it took for me to come up with it was a little common sense and a desire to optimize a piece of software rather than merely expand it.

Back in the day of 5 1/4" floppy drives in computers with no hard drives and less RAM than my Casio digital wristwatch (really), programmers had to make every tiny bit of every program they wrote as resource-efficient as possible. The programming game wasn't about adding features; it was about getting the task the program was written for done, as quickly and efficiently and painlessly as possible.

(And yes, ladies and gents, I know that's the origin of the Y2K bugs the media was screaming about pretty much constantly in the latter half of last year programmers decided it wasn't worth the resources (like storage space) to hold all those 19's before the years.

Back in '60 and '70 it was a good call. But at some point people stopped thinking about whether it was a good idea and just kept doing what they had always done. A classic example of tradition trumping common sense.)

Apple, like Microsoft and most (though not all, God bless Nisus) other software companies, have long since stopped asking "archaic" questions like "is it worth it?" because as far as they are concerned, the answer is, "Computers are Fast". RAM is Cheap. Hard drive space is Cheap," perhaps followed by "Features sell upgrades." But long lost are words of wisdom passed down from grandfather to grandson, "If it's worth doing, it's worth doing right."

Apple and friends will say they are doing it right. And they'll point to two things: features and stability. If they talk about speed at all, they'll be touting the potential of the G4, and hiding the fact that their OS is keeping the hardware from living up to its potential by unnecessarily over-burdening it with nonessentials (or even niceties, like Sherlock, QuickTime, etc.).

(You can do a "minimum install" of the OS, and it'll come in at around 13 MB. That's a lot more than the days of emergency 3.5" startup disks, but it's a sharp improvement over 160 MB of the recommended install. What's in that extra 140 MB or so, and did anyone at Apple ever ask if it's worth it, or if the same job could be done in 120 MB?)

To me, doing it right means taking the existing product and making it more sleek, more usable, faster before adding new features. [/b]That's how you avoid what I call bloat asking "How do we make what we have better?" rather than just "What can we add to what we already have[/b]?"

Apple has added a lot to the Mac OS, but there's been pitifully little improvement to some of the most basic functions of the OS that have been around since System 7 calculating folder sizes, finding a file on your hard drive, starting up your computer, emptying the trash, starting up programs none of these has improved much in the last several major releases, and several have actually deproved in spite of significantly faster hardware.

(If you question "How much improvement is possible here?" Check out BeOS.  On a Power Mac 9500, it is literally jaw-droppingly fast, beating a G3 with 8.6 or 9.0 head-to-head, hands down, at tasks like emptying trash, calculating folder sizes, and performing finds.) Apple has simply stopped concerning itself with mundane things like performance, favouring the flashier and more advertisement-friendly New Amazing Features.

All of the recent additions to Mac OS have proven that Apple can and does Think Different. What I'd really like to see, however, is an Apple that can Think Better.

Written by Paul Fatula
Last Edit: September 24, 2021, 09:06 by Bolkonskij
adrianrmarsh
2 MB
*
Posts: 2
Colour Classic II user to PowerBook 'Pismo'
View Profile
Reply #1 on: September 24, 2021, 08:19

This article, from late 1999, is almost prophetic in its evaluation of where Apple's OS's were (and are) going – no real development in functionality and speed (to say nothing of originality), enormous operating systems that fill up hard drives (or SSD's these days) and no real improvement in speed, despite major improvements in hardware and architecture. When I think about my Newton MessagePad 2100 and my iPhone SE, the comparison is astonishing and becomes even more so when software is considered - the things that Newton MessagePads could do and the wonderful software created for them with tiny memory demands, compared to the bloated, frankly invasive and privacy-reducing 'apps' on the iPhone, it is truly appalling what has happened. Notifications used to be useful, telling you about meetings and calls that you needed to attend to, things to do that needed doing and genuine tasks that resulted in better productivity (whether in business, academia or everyday life).
The irony of the passage of time that this article demonstrates is how little we appreciated Mac OS9 at the time, and how wonderful it was (and still is; I'm writing this on my PowerBook 'Pismo' running OS9.2.2), and what horrors awaited us with Mac OSX, [anti] social media and the descent of Apple into rampant consumerism from being a computer company. System 7 was faster, leaner and more efficient and can still be productive, useful and enjoyable (that has disappeared from computer use in general, as we've become slaves to commodification,  commercialisation and exploitation of our machines and OS's, subject to the whims of 'fashion' and 'fad' rather than genuine innovation – all form and no legitimate content), but OS9 was (and remains) a brilliant system to use on G3 and G4 machines. It is also fun, even though it crashes (usually when browsing the web and faced with the monstrosity that the Internet has become – which is why we love 'the Old Net', isn't it?) in a way that MacOS now is just irritating, intrusive and sometimes mind-numbingly coercive in the constant barrage of 'social media' notifications. Instead of being the athelete with the sledge hammer, launching it at the screen image of Big Brother, we've become the grey, bald drones placidly consuming Big Brother's (Netflix, Facebook, Instagram, Amazon, Twitter and yes, Apple) torrent of disinformation and 'newspeak', 'doublespeak' and 'commercialspeak'. And we did it ourselves, we signed up to giving away our privacy, our freedom from endless (and pointless) consumption, our independent and critical perspective on the world, our ability to communicate creatively and meaningfully using amazing technology. From this rather bleak perspective, using System 7, Newton OS, OS8, OS9 are not the reactionary impulses of a group of dwindling (older) oddballs, but a revolutionary act to reclaim, revitalise and reinvent 'the joy of computing' (to misquote the title of a famous 'health' manual). By the G3 and PowerBook, set our people free! :-)
Last Edit: September 24, 2021, 08:22 by adrianrmarsh
Bolkonskij
Administrator
1024 MB
*****
Posts: 2023
View Profile Cornica - Video Entertainment for Mac OS users
Reply #2 on: September 24, 2021, 09:11

Love your post, adrian! Very true. Using our "obsolete" Mac OS means freedom from modern tech companies (the kind of silently crossing out their own founding slogans like "Don't do evil". That alone is a statement).

Embrace true personal computing! :-)
mac-cellar
128 MB
****
Posts: 176
Gotta love System 7
View Profile Mac Cellar's Home Page
Reply #3 on: September 24, 2021, 18:56

Bravo adrianrmarsh!  Well done!
68040
512 MB
*****
Posts: 950
68k - thy kingdom come, thy will be done !
View Profile
Reply #4 on: October 18, 2021, 10:15

Kudos to you dear Sir for pointing out that te emperor runs down main street buck naked. My dreaded Windoze system (by now confined to virtualized imprisonment inside a VMware engine) buggs me at *every* start with "Installing updates - requires reboot" requests.

I am all for security updates but why the heck do so mny of them reuires ureboots *immediately*? I just wanted to open a tricky Word document in Win 10 and next thing I know I am sitting in front of that dreaded MS boot logo and wait and wait and ...

And those awful looking apps from the MS store. Our programs from way back in the 90's had better looking UIs. Where did all that graphics power go we paid so much money for? Do I have to play FPS games just to get some 3D feel back into my Desktop life?

I can now connect to half a dozen different online cloud storages out of the box - none of which I've ever used before or plan to do so in the future. But writing a simple text file - and get that printed - turns into a bubbly nightmare. In MacOS 8.1 (and older Windoze versions) there is 1 place where to configure network settings and you click on the printer icon and get to setup everything that has to do with printed output.

The MacOS Chooser might be a bit overloaded as the central got-to-point for printing, file sharing and so on - but heck, I call it up and within seconds I am ready to go.
Yet in Windoze 10 in took me almost an hour before I was able to print the first page on my new Pocket Printer. And for that I paid close to $500?

Having configured an Apple Talk Server on my new Linux box I am seriously considering to do all my printing from now on directly via MacOS 8.1, using the Linux box as a mere print router.
Pages: [1]

© 2021 System7Today.com.
The Apple Logo, Macintosh™, Mac OS™, and others property of Apple Computer, Inc.
This site is in no way affiliated with Apple Computer, Inc.