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All replies
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Helpful answers
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Jul 25, 2012 10:09 AM in response to wesbosby da bishop,Well, this is a point worth making.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Mac_OS
There's never been an eighth major revision of a macintosh operating system before...
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Jul 25, 2012 11:42 AM in response to wesbosby Guttsu,WOW, so I STILL can't update from Snow Leapord then? I absolutely CAN NOT believe Apple hasn't fixed this issue. It bothers me to no end that I purchased a Mac Pro just so i can have a computer thats severly undersupported. I guess I should just throw away my two other monitors?
Feedback has been left, for months and months, PLEASE fix this ASAP Apple.
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Jul 25, 2012 11:45 AM in response to Guttsuby fishffishstinks,Apple seems to be reverting to the days of single-tasking applications. Even in full screen metro apps in Windows 8, you can use the desktop on the second screen at the same time.
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Jul 25, 2012 11:49 AM in response to da bishopby David M Brewer,da bishop wrote:
Well, this is a point worth making.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Mac_OS
There's never been an eighth major revision of a macintosh operating system before...
For the record this is the ninth revision of the OS... there was a 10.0.
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Jul 25, 2012 11:54 AM in response to David M Brewerby da bishop,Did you try 10.0 developer preview?! That was just really scary. Doesn't count in my books. There was also OSX server 1.0, which might count. Wasn't ready for production until 10.3 where I come from, but 10.1 didn't do daily kernel panics or lose files that you're copying, unlike 10.0.
Still, that's at least 8 versions. Just saying. You'd a thought that various window/screen modes would have been perfected. I still can't believe that you can't put the dock on the screen you want, and the menu bar on a different screen.
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Jul 25, 2012 2:37 PM in response to fishffishstinksby Trane Francks,fishffishstinks wrote:
Apple seems to be reverting to the days of single-tasking applications. Even in full screen metro apps in Windows 8, you can use the desktop on the second screen at the same time.
And then there are the guys with half-a-dozen displays on their Linux boxes. Those work just fine, too, I bet.
I bought Lion, but am still running Snow Leopard. As it stands now, this 5-year-old MacBook 2,1 (4GB RAM, 600GB SSD) will never see an upgrade and will be used for as long as it can still present a viable work environment for the development/testing I need to do in Windows under Parallels Desktop. I had every intention of purchasing a MacBook Pro Retina with Mountain Lion, but I will not purchase more Apple hardware until such time as they fix this problem.
DOS and DESQview did full-screen mode task switching beautifully ... in 1990. Twenty-two years later, I expect better from Apple.
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Jul 25, 2012 4:33 PM in response to Guttsuby TankGuy23,Just to clarify, Guttsu, you can have two windows open and maximized in two seperate monitors in Mountain Lion just the same as in Snow Leopard. Spaces integrates beautifully with two destops —until you bring an app into fullscreen (note this is different then just maximizing it).
The problem is that apps running in fullscreen take up one space on every display, insted of just one space on one single display. Most apps (with a few notable exceptions) have nothing to display on a second display so the space is waisted.
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Jul 26, 2012 8:40 AM in response to wesbosby David Bernstein1,I thought this was supposed to be fixed in Mountain Lion. In fact, the What's New in Mountain Lion page on the Apple web said, has this to say:
Go full screen on any display
If you have a secondary display connected to your Mac, you can take an app full screen on either display. Drag the window to the desired display and click the full-screen button.
So what happened?
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Jul 26, 2012 8:42 AM in response to David Bernstein1by wesbos,They forgot to mention "and whatever screen you aren't using, we'll just go ahead and make it useless by covering it in the linnen pattern"
In 10.7 you could only fullscreen on the main monitor with the dock. Now you can fullscreen on any monitor but the other one is still rendered useless.
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Jul 28, 2012 2:38 PM in response to wesbosby Simonp123456,Yes, I had to read this twice when I checked to see if it was fixed. Full screen on any display... but still with the r3tarded behaviour of blanking out the other monitor.
Apple wont be getting my £14 let's put it that way. Shocking oversight not to have fixed this issue by now.
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Aug 1, 2012 11:37 AM in response to Simonp123456by slackerbot,Apple has entered new levels of ********. Windows 8 might just hand them their collective behinds on a platter.
Back in the late '90s I remember the fruity iMac ad, in a world of grey desktop PCs.
Now with a grey & drab Mountain Lion, complete with functionally useless "features," and a fruity Windows 8 with at least some imagination, I'd say the whole game has been reversed.
Apple has become its own enemy.
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Aug 4, 2012 5:24 AM in response to wesbosby Sulaiman.K,I'm having the same issue that is related to this case. Apple is likely to look into this issue to get resolved i suggest many of you that having this issue please give a troubleshoot to Apple (Report it here http://www.apple.com/feedback/macosx.html) against this case so they might will fix this issue on the next version of Mountain Lion 10.8.x hopefully Apple can look into fixing this issue if not try to submit the report again and again than the Apple developers will be forced to work on this case.
I hope this information will be helpful to all of us!
Good Luck everyone!
– Sulaiman
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Aug 13, 2012 7:31 AM in response to wesbosby rcgoodfellow,It is possible to get rid of the linen (it took some time to go through the options). In parallels, exit full screen mode, then go to the Virtual Machine menu. Select Configure, then go to Full Screen. You can then un-check Use Mac OS X Full Screen. It will get rid of the linen, however I find its particularly glitchy on my laptop's display. Parallels is displaying fine, but any app that is loaded in my OS X seizures... Parallels FAIL.
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Aug 13, 2012 7:32 AM in response to rcgoodfellowby rcgoodfellow,I used to use Parallels 6 on Lion and they worked beautifully together... Now that I have Parallels 7 and Mountain Lion, it's a piece of junk.