|
|
|
|
|
by coldtea
4065 days ago
|
|
This sounds like reasoning from some parallel universe to me. First, Apple hasn't dropped any ball with Yosemite. It's it's as good as it ever was. People have been complaining for every major release since 10.2 how the OS gotten more buggier, etc. Then a couple of point updates come and fix any major new bugs and the stop. Then, sometime around 10.x.6-8 a new version is relased and then they complain for the next release and remember the old one fodly. I have articles and blog posts with similar complaints from 10.5 and 10.7 and 10.8 and 10.9 with the same pattern. Even for 10.6, which was mostly a no-new-features release. Second, even if they had, there's not much value in "offering to port Cocoa apps". Major apps are already cross platform (from Adobe stuff and Eclipse/Idea, to Cubase, Sublime Text and Mathematica, including Office, which MS itselfs makes anyway), and smaller Mac-Only apps don't have much to offer to Windows users, and wouldn't be much outside of the Mac ecosystem anyway. You'd get what, Pixelmator and BBEdit? There are 4-5 established alternatives in Windows for each piece of Mac software. |
|
[1]: http://arstechnica.com/apple/2015/01/12/why-dns-in-os-x-10-1...
[2]: http://osxdaily.com/2015/04/06/windowserver-high-cpu-usage-m...
[3]: http://osxdaily.com/2015/04/10/fix-finder-problems-mac-os-x/
[4]: http://osxdaily.com/2015/04/17/fix-slow-folder-populating-cl...