I'm just going to touch on a few things, as Apple certainly has—with
greater flare—shown off
Leopard's features.
First, almost everything worked. I had a few glitches, as I describe in
Leopard: The installation and
Leopard: Problems.
First, SuperDuper! had already provided Leopard support, and it worked. Although I can see using Time Machine, to recover the state of
individual files, I like having a complete, bootable image that I control.
This may change over time. (No pun intended.)
Time Machine. It is cool, neat, etc. As I just said, I can imagine the need and using it. I have only played with it.
Spaces really helps my productivity. Under Tiger, to avoid some clutter, I used to have my desktop display be my "main display" and my
Powerbook display be my secondary. It sat off to my left as you can see
here. With Spaces, I just keep my PowerBook lid closed and don't use that
display.
As you can see
(click for larger image), I have 4 spaces set up.
In the image, space 1 has my Mail program and a web browser showing.
Space 2, my instant messenger windows. Space 3 has my iCal. And in Space
4, I have a few X-term windows up, connected to different systems.
Mail and iCal now work more closely together. Mail allows you to create
"To Do" items, which show in your Mail, but also show up in iCal.
Here is an example:
I miss the side drawer display in the old version of iCal. To Do Items are
show on the side (as before), but details appear in a
pop-up window. More on that in a bit.
Mail also recognizes content that might be a calendar event.
This is very nice. Here are two examples. First, I received e-mail that
had
information about a university commencement. Note the option it
gives me. I did select Create New iCal Event, which brought me to
here.
In another e-mail, someone
invites me to meet for breakfast. I
"hover" my mouse
over the text, pick Create New iCal Event, and
create the event
in iCal.
As I said, I miss the way iCal used to display information in a side panel.
Now one needs to double click on the even (just like the To Do Item, earlier)
to be able to see details and edit the event.
One feature Mail could have done without: stationery. Stationery is
terrific—for hand-written mail. All it does is add an image attachment that may or may not be seen as a "background" to the email. (Many times it will not show up—it depends on the e-mail client. The user
will then click on the attachment to see it and it will make them wonder why
you send them a fabric swatch.)
Finder changes. The jury is out on the changes to the sidebar.
I find it a bit cluttered and haven't had time to figure out how to fix this.
Networked systems that are reachable and "shareable," show up under
SHARED. Much of the time.
But, just this morning as I wrote this, everything had disappeared until
I connected (via SMB or NFS) again to the linuxserver. Then it showed
up there again.
Of course, I like
Quick Look, and I am sure I will like it more
as I use it more.
Oh, and Dock and its "reflective 3D" look?
I turned it off. Too much candy upsets my stomach.