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Path: news.eternal-september.org!eternal-september.org!feeder3.eternal-september.org!border-2.nntp.ord.giganews.com!border-3.nntp.ord.giganews.com!nntp.giganews.com!s1-2.netnews.com!feeder.usenetexpress.com!tr2.iad1.usenetexpress.com!news-out.netnews.com!postmaster.netnews.com!eu1.netnews.com!not-for-mail X-Trace: DXC=\B6`@In:FXE]2f>5GVFLaGHWonT5<]0TMdjI?Uho:XeKLeo?9o4lXdAbn=mogaTa9K[el]69E]KbJj4VaB`F<oeH=mk><kNCkGORRj8?7QCgSH X-Complaints-To: support@blocknews.net From: Retrograde <fungus@amongus.com.invalid> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Subject: Mac OSX Dock turns 25 Newsgroups: comp.misc Date: 08 Jan 2025 04:17:05 GMT Lines: 45 Message-ID: <677dfc41$2$22$882e4bbb@reader.netnews.com> NNTP-Posting-Host: 127.0.0.1 X-Trace: 1736309825 reader.netnews.com 22 127.0.0.1:42671 From the «still awesome» department: Title: The Mac OS X dock turns 25 Author: Thom Holwerda Date: Sat, 04 Jan 2025 22:52:27 +0000 Link: https://www.osnews.com/story/141482/the-mac-os-x-dock-turns-25/ James Thomson, developer of, originally, DragThing and now PCalc, also happens to be the developer of the very first publicly shown version of the Mac OS dock. Now that it was shown to the world by Steve Jobs exactly 25 years ago, he reminisces about what it was like to create such an iconic piece of software history. The new Finder (codename “Millennium”) was at this point being written on Mac OS 9, because Mac OS X wasn’t exactly firing on all cylinders quite yet. The filesystem wasn’t working well, which is not super helpful when you are trying to write a user interface on top of it. The Dock was part of the Finder then, and could lean on all the high level C++ interfaces for dealing with disks and files that the rest of the team was working on. So, I started on Mac OS 9, working away in Metrowerks Codewarrior. The Finder was a Carbon app, so we could actually make quite a bit of early progress on 9, before the OS was ready for us. I vividly remember the first time we got the code running on Mac OS X. ↫ James Thomson[1] I especially like the story about how Steve Jobs really demanded Thomson live in Cupertino in order to work on the dock, instead of remaining remote in Ireland. Thomson and his wife decided not to move to the United States, so he figured he’d lose his assignment, or maybe even his job altogether. Instead, his managers told him something along the lines of “don’t worry, we’ll just tell Steve you moved”. What followed were a lot of back-and-forth flights between Ireland and California, and Thomson’s colleagues telling Steve all sorts of lies and cover stories for whenever he was in Ireland and Steve noticed. Absolutely wild. The dock is one of those things from my years using Mac OS X – between roughly 2003 and 2009 or so – that has stuck around with me ever since. To this day, I have a dock at the bottom of my screen that looks and works eerily similar to the Mac OS X dock, and I doubt that’s going to change any time soon. It suits my way of using my computer incredibly well, and it’s the first thing I set up on any new installation I perform (I use Fedora KDE). Links: [1]: https://tla.systems/blog/2025/01/04/i-live-my-life-a-quarter-century-at-a-time/ (link)