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  1. archive.arstechnica.com

    In order to do this, the behavior of on-screen items must follow familiar rules, and their appearance (size, location, color, etc.) must be a reliable source of information. We need a coherent, stable interface: the Spatial Finder. In the absence of reliable spatial cues, the user must depend on more abstract pieces of information.
  2. archive.arstechnica.com

    It's the useful properties of real objects in space that make the Spatial Finder what it is (or "was", since the last Finder that can reasonably be called "spatial" was in Mac OS 9). These properties are: Coherency: there is a direct, one-to-one relationship between folders and windows.
  3. archive.arstechnica.com

    Imagine using the Finder's "Find" command to search for something--say, all files created today that are larger than 2MB and are somewhere on the volume named "My Work." Now imagine "saving" that search in the form of a "magical" folder that always appeared to contain the result of that search, as if the search was run constantly in the background.
  4. daringfireball.net

    Siracusa on the Finder Wednesday, 2 April 2003. At Ars Technica, John Siracusa writes about the sorry state of the Mac OS X Finder.It's long and deep, and effectively covers two topics: 1) a descriptive, balanced, and fair look at what is wrong with the Finder; 2) a proposed design for how Apple could fix it.
  5. betalogue.com

    ArsTechnica on Mac OS X's Finder Posted by Pierre Igot in: Macintosh April 2nd, 2003 • 10:42 pm. ... 2003 at 10:42 pm and is filed under Macintosh. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own ...

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