I was sent this link by a friend. The comments offer an interesting discussion on the pros and cons of the zoom vs maximize and predictably, near the top is a rabid OS X zealot reaming the author for having a differing opinion from the ‘right’ way. When is it ever ok to behave this way, no matter how wrong you think your opponent is? If I used the same tone in sharing my faith I would be lynched.
Anyway. There is still some excellent discussion. The author mentions the cluttered feel to the desktop when using multiple non-maximized windows, a sentiment I agree with. One of the commenters mentions the real desktop analogy, how if you have multiple papers on your desk you have to move one out of the way to see what’s below; so really, how unintuitive is that? In my case though my desk is clean (at work anyway). All papers are filed away in a drawer and only the material I’m working at the time is out. I never have to move papers out of the way and I can’t stand a cluttered desk, I don’t feel like I can think as well or stay as focused. I treat my virtual desktop the same way. I do have multiple windows open occasionally, and multiple tabs in Firefox; but in OS X things felt way more cluttered. I can’t explain why because really its more minimalist than Vista which I appreciate very much. Perhaps it has to do with the toolbar (and really, the zoom vs maximize issue is minor for me, its the toolbar that is the dealbreaker). That being said, I rarely use maximize on my widescreen monitor but I do love it in Ubuntu on my smaller monitor for terminals (especially in portrait mode). However, I hardly ever used zoom in OS X either. I suppose I’ve become too used to resizing windows myself.
As for Expose I found it worked far slower than alt-tab, but I usually don’t have a gajillion things open. It has its place and if I have both I’ll use both for different purposes. Ubuntu/Beryl has a similar feature that I have used (both of these Expose or Expose-like features work better than the pretty-but-useless 3d switching Vista offers).
Other than the occasional zealot, the comments left by Mac fans in this article are some of the most intelligent and open I’ve seen so far. One mentions the advantage of the OS X windowing system when drag and drop is well supported. You can’t drag photos from app to app in Vista and expect the same behavior, something I do appreciate in OS X but rarely use. Another mentions the advantages of the Mac way in a pleasant manner, but also talks about its drawbacks. Specifically, the advantages of the OS X windowing system are lost if its hard to gain focus (seeing instantly which window is on top, for example). He goes on to say that OS X has been moving backwards in this respect over the years, like the brushed chrome theme; but seems to maybe be moving forward again with Leopard.
Overall I like many of the features of OS X but I dislike its complete lack of customizability. I’m also very turned off by the rabid screamings of its fans, a significant contribution to my dismissal of the system. I might get a macbook but that’s probably as far as my adoption will go. M$ has its problems too, while the windowing system isn’t elegant or pretty (or even useful in some cases) my primary issue with Windows (and specifically Vista) is how things are handled behind the scenes. I’m a shell user and I like tinkering and working behind the gui. OS X does let me do that but my other annoyances (and its fans) pretty much overshadows the positive experience I had using it. With Cygwin on Vista and a second Ubuntu machine (and Ubuntu as my primary os at home) I’m pretty set. As far as my uses are concerned, Ubuntu is the perfect os except for games and I have Vista to cover that end. I also have to use Windows at work so having Ubuntu around for coding and other such needs works well.
I suppose the fact that I use two operating systems just goes to show how imperfect OSes are for me and, I daresay, are for everyone.