The Apple Core

Jason D. O'Grady & David Morgenstern

Developers come to the ‘rescue’ of Leopard’s Stacks, Dock

By | November 29, 2007, 10:10am PST

One of the most heated complaints about Mac OS X Leopard concerns the new Stacks navigation feature and the new behavior of folders on the Dock. A variety of small applications recently surfaced to fix the “problem.”

In previous flavors of Mac OS X, users could drag a folder to the dock and when they held down the mouse button, a hierarchical menu of the contents was presented. Users could move up and down the list and select an item.

Developers aim to ‘rescue’ Leopard’s Stacks, Dock

The Leopard release changed that behavior. Now, the Dock can have Stacks, a new kind of folder that shows the items in the Stack as a fan or as a grid of icons in a preview pane. The image of the Stack is based on the items in the folder, or more the first item.

Apple says the feature is “pretty neat.

Leopard starts you off with two premade stacks: one for downloads and the other for documents. The Downloads stack automatically captures files downloaded from Safari, Mail, and iChat, and the Documents stack is a great place to keep things like presentations, spreadsheets, and word processing files. You can create as many stacks as you wish simply by dragging folders to the right side of your Dock. Pretty neat.

Not! Many users, especially longtime OS X users, think this change sucks.

It was a hot topic of discussion at this week’s BMUGWest user group meeting in San Francisco. One longtime attendee blamed this and other changes on the influx of Windows switchers. This is an interesting and valid point for some changes in the OS but perhaps not for this one.

Leopard’s Finder Cover Flow: Yuck! Stacks File browsing.

“The fan is stupid and the grid is useless,” said one. He also bemoaned the shrinking options, since the Dock doesn’t let users decide on whether they want the old folder behavior or the Stacks behavior. He quoted the Henry Ford adage now being adopted by Apple: “You can have any color you want, as long as it’s black.”

Developers have offered Dock substitutes since the introduction of Mac OS X. And several this month released “fixes” for Leopard’s Stacks. Here are some of them:

HierarchicalDock. Released last week, this freeware app is by a duo of coders in Vienna going by the name of Eternal Storms Software. I haven’t loaded the app but it appears very straightforward.

Quay. This app by German developer Rainer Brockerhof was demonstrated at the BMUGWest meeting. It costs $10.

OlderFolder. This software by Justin Hawkwood is freeware. The reviews give it good marks. However, I found its directions a bit kludgy.

To create additional folders, just duplicate the application and launch, as OldFolder keeps track of which folder to open based on the launched applications name.

However, some folks might want to just forego the standard Dock.

DragThing. TLA Systems says that DragThing is the “original dock,” since they had a dock-style launcher for the Classic Mac OS. It supports multiple docks, with lots of viewing options. It cost $29 and the Leopard-compatible version was released this month.

Hierarchy. This freeware app is a stripped down version of DragThing but free. It presents a small palette that you can drop folders or files into. From its hierarchical menus, files can be launched and folders either opened or browsed in the menu.

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Topics

David Morgenstern has covered the Mac market and other technology segments for 20 years.

Disclosure

David Morgenstern

Freelance journalist/blogger David Morgenstern has nothing to disclose.

Biography

David Morgenstern

David Morgenstern has covered the Mac market and other technology segments for 20 years. In the recent past, he founded Ziff-Davis' Storage Supersite, served as news editor for Ziff Davis Internet and held several executive editorial positions at eWEEK. In the 1990s, David was editor of Ziff Davis' award-winning MacWEEK news publication as well as its successor title, eMediaWEEKly, which focused on multiplatform professional content creation. His byline can be found online and in print publications including CreativePro.com, Peachpit Press' Mac Bible and Popular Photography.

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RE: Developers come to the 'rescue' of Leopard's Stacks, Dock
tomlin21-24319035676893835085146735905770 11th Oct
High-quality to accumulate going to your weblog after yet again, it has been months reebok nfl jerseys for me. Appropriately this submitting that i've been waited for so complete.
0 Votes
+ -
I disagree.
558742 29th Nov 2007
I know how many users that have been devoted to an OS for so long hate to see change such as this, but it is a good change. Why do people not like change so much. This will definately imporve my productivity on projects so how can it be a bad thing. It also looks quite cool, especially when I use in front of all my friends who love Vista because of its 'cool look' and 'transparent aero interface'. They are astounded and one even thought I was using Vista for a moment, but then I corrected him saying that it was a useful new feature and therefore could not have been part of Vista!
0 Votes
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Wow, you had me up to the part
GuidingLight 29th Nov 2007
where you said but then I corrected him saying that it was a useful new feature and therefore could not have been part of Vista!.

I thought maybe it was to be an honest opinion, now I read it as just another post from an Apple apologist.

Will good discussions ever come back to ZDNet?
0 Votes
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Ever?
People 29th Nov 2007
Were there ever?
0 Votes
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You never had me
jorjitop 29th Nov 2007
What did your post add to this thread? We need to get the spam off this site.
0 Votes
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I do agree
GuidingLight 29th Nov 2007
What did your post add to this thread? We need to get the spam off this site

My post was an attempt to bring that to light.
0 Votes
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People dislike change because ....
kd5auq 29th Nov 2007
Change can be good, but it has to offset the temporary loss of
productivity while old habits are broken and new ones are learned.

Some change can be dangerous and counter-productive. In the U.S.
people drive on the right side of the road. If king George were to
suddenly decree that we switch the the "metric" system of driving
on the left side, the accident rate would skyrocket for no good
reason (not to mention the hidden cost of changing all the traffic
signs and signals).
0 Votes
+ -
Maybe that is what some see here. Change for change's sake.
0 Votes
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Crybabies.
People 29th Nov 2007
That's all.

This is on the "news" tab for what reason again?
0 Votes
+ -
Because it's a real step backward
j.m.galvin 29th Nov 2007
The hierarchical menu goes all the way back to the Apple menu. It's BY FAR the fastest way to get to your stuff.

Every single one of our users has an Accounts folder (with a custom icon) in the dock. Within that is each of their accounts sorted by year. They can find stuff in a flash, even with thousands of files.

We also have folders, again with their own icons, for Apps. Instead of having a zillion icons in the dock, the user instantly gets the app by name and launches.

You can also find averything on the hard drive quickly. Try trashing prefs for a misbehaving app. It far faster by going through that pop up than going through the steps to get to the proper prefs folder.

Try it, if you have a 10.4 or earlier machine. Just drag your hard drive over the right or bottom of the dock. Then right click and see how easily you can drill down.

The new thingy is just eye candy that hurts productivity.
0 Votes
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http://www.leoparddocks.com/
shoktai@... 29th Nov 2007
0 Votes
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Leopard Stacks....works for me...
8string 30th Nov 2007
Stacks work for me. I like the feature. An OS is never going to satisfy everyone. I think Leopard is another step forward in OS design.
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RE: Developers come to the 'rescue' of Leopard's Stacks, Dock
tomlin21-24319035676893835085146735905770 11th Oct
High-quality to accumulate going to your weblog after yet again, it has been months reebok nfl jerseys for me. Appropriately this submitting that i've been waited for so complete.

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