this box fort is my true calling

yes that was sort of the idea
no... to be honest, OS X just doesn't really do much for me anymore. it doesn't look BAD; I just don't like Helvetica as an 'everywhere' font. That and I was finally pretty much used to the 10.6 > 10.7 UI changes. I'm sorta ready to just switch to linux so I can deal with the same environment at home and at work. i basically continue using it for familiarity and because it works really well with my iPhone, in addition to a few non-nix applications that have been dealbreakers for a long time. However, my Air is an i7 with a good amount of RAM so virtualizing OS X when I need it is totally an option.Muirium wrote: Yosemite looks that bad without Retina, eh? I've been running it since DP1. Been my primary OS for quite a while now. Gorgeous beast at 1800p.
Apple's happy so long as you're buying their hardware, of course. Although quite how Windows etc. handles a Retina MacBook Pro, I can't be arsed to check.
Please what?Daniel Beardsmore wrote:Linux users meanwhile largely still have no idea how to antialias fonts, so they're sat in Spindly Font Land.
Linux has the best font rendering in the world available in a production system, so long as your distro actually uses it, or you want to mess about making it work. Maybe recently all the distros have finally started shipping with the good system (Freetype?) instead of the stupid spindly look that, while anti-aliased, just looks horrible, like Mac OS 9's ugly text.
As with most things Linux, it is subject to endless tweaking and whatnot. But only if you turn it on!
I tried a few Linux distros, and most of them seem to come with good settings out of the box now. My Arch installation is struggling with some fonts (the headers on Wikipedia are terrible) but everything else looks perfect, and I don't think I changed anything in that regard.