Anyone have any input on this? I am not totally sure about it. It wouldn't be a high priority anyway, I thought I would mention.
Having used OS X and multiple Windows versions, it always seemed that an application crash was much more prone in classic OS to lock up the system requiring a restart of some kind.
Thoughts?
Well, I am 100% sure that our "feelings" about it is highly influenced about Apples "propaganda" in early X versions, telling us at every program crash that the system "does not have to be restarted".
Thats not a kind of provokation or to start a endless debate, but I truely belive so.
Cooperative multitasking is not that bad at all, and I see no huge problems at desktop systems using cooperative multitasking instead of symmetric multitasking.
I see some problems with Mac OS 9.x especially 9.2.2 which became more unstable. Some months ago I learned here that the Carbonized programs may be a cause. That fits to my own memories. Mac OS 8.6 was the most stable OS I ever used. Rock solid, and not comparable to Win NT/2000/Millenium or early Mac OS X versions up to 10.4.11. I even got the feeling that user application at recent Ubuntu/Linux MiNT computers crash more often than at Mac OS 8.6 (but that might be just a feeling again, influenced by my "love" to the Mac OS).
About new features for the Mac OS, I am sure that drivers are most needed recently. USB 2 is the main drawback in everyday usage. Graphiccards are not such a huge problem in my opinion. There was for example the ROM for flashing PC ATI Radeons 9000 and 9200 cards to Mac ones. If someone would adapt this Roms and make it possible to use the whole 256MB Ram of these cards, that are still in production, we could equip every PCI-Mac with a very good card with verry well 3d possibilities for our systems - for about 25 Euros - brand new.
Another good example for "drivers" is Intecs HD-Speedtools possibility to use discs bigger than 128MB at every built in Mac IDE controller, even if it was told to be impossible by Apple.
In general I am not missing much with Mac OS 9. Most things are at a user level:
-) modern PDF Viewer - could be quickly done with the existing Ghostscript & MacGSView
-) Improved Classilla
-) Possibility to use .odt/xml textfiles
-) some modern Video Codecs (best would be a PCI decodercard like the Wired4DVD was for MPG2)
What I would really like to see at OS level at 9 machines is the possibility to use both CPU at Dual computers in general. Something like "1 program at this CPU the other one at the other". Cameron Kaiser made some tests int his directions (he tried to use the 2nd CPU for JavaScript) but stopped at some point.