|
|
|
Navigate: | My Mac Online | The Archives | October 1998 | Shareware Review - GoMac 1.5v3 | |
![]() |
|
My Mac Magazine jason@mymac.com
If there was one measly, single feature in Windows 95 or 98 that you could consider decent, what would you pick? (I know, it seems like a trick question, but it's not. :¬P) One popular answer would be the "Task Bar", a feature that allows for single-click cycling through open programs and windows, making multitasking a little easier.
Just Like Windows However, GoMac falls a bit short of the functionality of the task bar used by Windows (or as GoMac refers to it, a "Program Bar"). Although there is a button for each open application at the bottom, individual windows within each application don't get their own buttons. As a result, you can use GoMac to switch between applications but not to move through open windows. It even mimics Windows 95/98's application-switching keyboard shortcut to allow you to cycle through open apps without the mouse. (Note that both keyboard shortcuts for application switching and a floating window that lists all open applications will be featured in MacOS 8.5.)
Is That a Feature? Of course, you can set options like automatically hiding the Program Bar, whether or not to hide other applications in the background, and which application you use to search your hard drive, but GoMac has too many of those trivial settings and not enough of the essential options that users expect. For instance, there is no way to customize the font/size of the start bar menu or clock; you cannot change what appears under the "Settings" menu item-it's permanently set to Control Panels, Extensions (for the Extensions Manager), Chooser, Monitors & Sound, Program Bar (to open the GoMac Control Panel), and Start Menu Items.
One of GoMac's best features is support for the Appearance Manager. Although this may not mean much now, it means better compatibility down the line. When users of Kaleidoscope 2.0 change schemes, for instance, GoMac changes the color of the program bar to match the scheme. However, it still doesn't change its fonts to automatically match the scheme's selected System font.
The Summary
Jason Kim
Websites mentioned:
|
|
Copyright ©1995-2000 My Mac Productions, All Rights Reserved |