The Mac Observer

Skip navigational links

DealsOnTheWeb Daily Deal: OneCall's Weekend Sale - 20 Great Items at Great Prices All Weekend Long

WSJ: Tips for Switching from Windows to Mac

by , 1:05 PM EDT, July 3rd, 2008

Walt Mossberg at the Wall Street Journal has posted some tips for users on Thursday who've already decided to make the switch from Windows to Mac.

Mr. Mossberg noted that the sales of Macs are growing much faster than PC sales overall. As a result, he gets a lot of e-mail with questions about the differences between the Windows and Mac OS X operating systems.

He added that the article isn't an argument for making the switch -- although the tacit suggestion is always there since Mr. Mossberg has praised the Mac at length in the past.

Accordingly, he digs into the details of Menu Bars, Task Bar, Start menu, Control Panels and how to quit programs. That one is tricky for former Windows users. Closing a Windows window with the red "X" quits the application. In contrast, clicking what seems to be the Mac analog, the red button at the top of a window, merely closes the window and doesn't quit the application.

Mr. Mossberg also took care to correct the myth that the Mac has no mouse right click function. That can be done in several ways, and all Macs that come with a mouse have one that has right click capability. One just has to enable that and other methods in the System Preferences.

Finally Mr. Mossberg pointed to some handy references: Mac 101 and Switch 101. These pointers and the references are valuable tools for any newbie who's made the switch or a Mac expert assisting someone else with the switch.

Observer Comments

Show: Subjects Only | Full Comments
Close Name:jbruni Posts: 78 Joined: 14 Jul 2006
Subject: closing windows and quitting apps

One thing that is annoying is the inconsistency on the mac about whether closing a window quits the app. Sometimes it does and sometimes it doesn't. I wonder if it would make sense for apple to change the appearance of the close button slightly to give a visual cue. Maybe an extra ring around the red button to indicate that it means more than closing the window.

View Name:Guest
Subject: utilities
Close Name:Shoaf Posts: 29 Joined: 31 Jul 2007
Subject:

Quote
jbruni wrote:
One thing that is annoying is the inconsistency on the mac about whether closing a window quits the app. ...


Although I mostly agree with your assessment, there is a bit of order to the issue. For the most part, apps that are pretty much useless w/out an open window, yet boast relatively short launch times (Address Book, Sys Prefs, etc.) will quit when you close the window. Apps that take longer to launch (anything from Adobe, Microsoft, etc.) and have situations where users would want to open a recent document or navigate to a particular file, will stay open until Quit.

But having a visual clue as to what will happen isn't such a bad idea IMO. The ring you suggested, or perhaps making the red close button larger in such instances would keep things visually simple and yet add to the user interaction.

Close Name:jimothy Posts: 581 Joined: 04 Jun 2004
Subject: Consistency

It should be noted that Windows isn't consistent in this regard, either. If you close the LAST window, the app quits, but if there are other open windows, it won't. Of course, that's the way you'd want it to be, but it's not always clear whether you have another open window, particular with the way alt-tab works on Windows.

Often, I want to close one window, then open another, and it's annoying to have the application quit on me, particularly if it takes several seconds for the application to launch.

But Windows has to operate this way, because of the foolish decision to put the menu bar in the window. They haven't come up with decent a way to provide an interface to a running application with no open document window. The horrendous MDI is an acknowledgement of the problem, but not a solution to it.

View Name:Guest
Subject: Two words - Excel, Word
Close Name:pep9454 Posts: 6 Joined: 24 Jan 2006
Subject:

The way I've always understood it is it's up to the programmer of the software to maintain the consistency and not the operating system.

e.g. 'cmd-H' ALWAYS hides the window in every program I've ever used....EXCEPT in Photoshop.'ctl-H' hides photoshop and that's Adobe's thing and not the Mac's problem...

Comment on this Article


You cannot edit your comments.   You cannot delete your comments.
Log in | Register | Having Problems? Reset TMO Cookies & Try Again
Username:   Password:   Log me on automatically each visit   

You are not logged in, and this post will appear as "Guest." Log in with your username and password from the TMO forums. If you do not have a username, you can register here.
Please note that guests are limited to including a maximum of two URLs per post.


Post A Comment
  Subject


  Your Comments



Please enter the word exactly as you see it in the image above. Registered users aren't prompted for this. Having trouble reading the image get a new one.


Recent Headlines - Updated Friday, July 4th, 2008

Fri., 7:30 AM
Happy Fourth of July!
Thu., 4:50 PM
Apple Slashes $400 from SSD Drive in MacBook Air
4:05 PM
It's Official - Firefox Sets Guinness Record for Downloads
3:30 PM
Apple Files Patent for a Multi-touch Gesture Language
2:20 PM
Editorial - Mac's Market Share and the Cascade Failure of Windows
1:35 PM
iPodObserver - Apple Slurps Up Samsung's NAND Flash for iPhone 3G
1:05 PM
WSJ: Tips for Switching from Windows to Mac
12:05 PM
iPodObserver - Google Intros Google Talk for iPhone
11:35 AM
iPO Just a Thought - iPod nano Versus iPhone: Decisons, Decisions...
10:55 AM
YouTube Ordered to Turn Over All User Records to Viacom
10:10 AM
Hot Forum Topic - Apple vs. Cell Carriers: Who's Winning the Game
9:25 AM
iPodObserver - Rumor: Best Buy, Radio Shack to Sell iPhone 3G
8:45 AM
.Mac Bookmark Sync Deadline Extended to July 6
8:10 AM
Adobe Reader 9 Hits the Streets
 

The Mac Observer Reader Specials

  • Download Typestyler, still the Ultimate Styling Tool for Internet, Print and Video Graphics. Works great in Classic with a Native OS X Version on the way. Free Tryout: www.typestyler.com
  • OWC: OWC Mercury On-The-Go FW400/800/USB2/eSATA Portables High Performance A/V Rated, **Bus Powered** **Up to 500GB in the Palm of your Hand** Macworld Editor's Choice, CNET 'Very Good' - from $75.99!
  • MacPro Memory 667Mhz With Apple Spec Heat Sink 2GB $90 / 4GB $134 / 8GB $264. Click to Maximize your Macs...
  • Mac observers can now play Party Poker for Mac as well as Mac casino games by going to MacPokerOnline.com.
  • RamJet Memory: MacBook 1Gig $39, 2Gig $78, 4Gig $195! Mac Pro 2Gig $115, 4Gig $189! 500G Seagate SATA II $139! Click here
  • For the latest Apple products use Ciao a comparison website to find laptops like MacBook Air. Then find the best prices on MP3 players and use our comparison tool to evaluate cell phones.

  • Laptop Hardware Provided by TechRestore - Overnight Mac & iPod Repairs.
  • Special Report: WWDC 2008
  • Special Report: iPhone
  • __________
  • Help TMO Grow
  • Podcast: Mac Geek Gab
  • Podcast: Apple Weekly Report
  • TMO on Twitter!
  • New Media Expo 2008

Apple Stock Quote

  • AAPL: $170.12. Change Today: +1.94.
  • (Prices delayed up to 20 minutes.)
  • Discuss in our Apple Finance Board

Hot Topics

Apple iTunes

Top Deals From DealsOnTheWeb