Eat All The Things Mac OS

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Gruber posts a blog on the death of “uniformity” in Mac OS design. Here is his conclusion:

Don't worry, here comes the EaseUS Mac data recovery software, which enables you to create a bootable USB drive on another Mac that works well, then, restart your Mac from it, and go ahead to recover files. Especially to restore data on system drive under macOS 10.13, it's very safe to recover from bootable media. As an operating system, Mac OS has always tried to make things sleek and minimalist on your desktop. However, in the older versions, the sync between Mac and iPhone led to a lot of clutter. To counter that, Apple added Desktop Stacks to make your desktop organized according to the criteria you desire. Plus, there are lots of creeps, so crafting a shelter, weapons, and combat play an important role. The crafting system is ridiculously deep and gives you tons of options to create weapons. Terraria is very similar to Minecraft. In fact, many see it as Minecraft in 2D, but once you start playing, you will notice all the things that make it unique.

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  • Mac OS lets you turn on so-called “full keyboard access”, but there are still many things you can’t do with the keyboard (try moving from the Calendars pane to the Day/Week/Month View pane in iCal, for example, or activating the all-important Scan button in Image Capture).

Whether you think this is a good thing or not, there’s no use fearing it. Apple’s passion for UI uniformity went away with the six-color logo. Change is inevitable. Individuality is the new norm. Mac UI design is only just starting to take influence from iOS UI design.

To take one example from the App Store and declare the end of ubiquitous design is a bit of a stretch. Yes, Twitter’s new app which cannibalized Tweetie should certainly cause some alarm. The iOS like scroll bars, darker user interface, intense use of animations, and overall “lightweight” approach could render other Mac applications as looking old and shoddy. Though I think we have yet to see the last of the uniformity. After all, uniformity is still at the core of Mac design: look no further than the move to unibody processes existing in all of their products. There is something about uniformity and cleanliness in style that will always linger in the Mac user experience.

A good example of a non-deviant is Reeder (there is a Beta 9 out there for you to try). Reeder seems to have two objectives in their design.

  1. Provide an interface familiar to all users of Reeder across all of the iOS and Mac computers.
  2. Keep true to the Mac creedo of design.

The first is obvious. Look at the interface for the iPad (landscape):

As you can see, there is a sidebar to move through each story tile, and a highlighted story tile shows the story on the far right. One can then share their story with others using the popular social media outlets or through Google Reader.

Now, here is the Mac version (click for larger size):

Here we see the similar tile design with the story as the focus on the right, but there are some noticeable differences due to the lack of touch controls.

  • A user needs to use the arrow keys to move through the tiles, and there are no actual buttons that one should click on.
  • The “refresh all” button and others similar have moved to the bottom.
  • Feeds can be seen right on the interface, rather than having to click a button to “zoom out” as in the iPad
  • Open/Close/Minimize buttons exist (for obvious reasons).

There are more obvious elements that seperate the two. But what’s interesting is what unites them:

  • You can still use a shortcut to make a particular tile starred or marked as read (for Mac, drag a tile in either direction; for iPad, drag the tile with your finger in either direction).
  • The upper right still has familiar controls to a user, like sharing with social media
  • You can switch quickly to all unread tiles, all tiles, and starred tiles.

The developer, Silvio Rizzi, has clearly made some design decisions in order to simplify the user experience. But he has done so by recognizing the character of the device. Obviously you wouldn’t need touch controls on a piece of Mac software, at least not yet. There may be a point where Mac OS becomes fully a touch oriented system, and then the iOS-ification is a valid claim. But for right now, the two OSs are still different enough where there needs to be less of a blur between the two types of designs.

One might ask, “Why did Mr. Rizzi stick with the brushed metal design and the colored beads to control window movement?” (Or similar questions as to why he used the “old conservative look”) It seems clear that Mr. Rizzi believes that there is a way to fundamentally distinguish the two devices as inherent in the design he chooses. If it is an iOS app, it has the darker interface. If it is a Mac app, the lighter one. Many similar design choices can show this.

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The burning question is whether this distinction will be recognized by other developers. Indeed, if Twitter had used this distinction, then their Mac app would look more like a Mac app. Twitter here is taking the progressive approach but in a way that still says “there is something fundamental to the Mac experience that will always be there.” Maybe there is no usage of ludica grande, but a sans-serif font in small-ish type was used. The window remains slightly rounded at the edges. The animations are apparent, but subtle so as not to completely distract you. Clicking on your profile still shows a little brushed metal at the top*. A neutral grey color is apparent in the background of tweets, rather than a simple white or even dramatically different color like blue. The menu bar indicator is still a black, impressed feature in the bar itself.

In conclusion, both the Reeder and the Twitter app suggest this: We have a future that is the iOS-ification of Mac OS X (and previewed in 10.7), but the roots of the Mac OS will never be forgotten. In fact, the design is one of the many things that makes people come back and love the experience.

This page illustrates the detailed process of recovering data from a failed Mac computer before you reinstalling the macOS. If you are having the same issue, follow through this page to see how to get data out of the failed Mac computer before macOS reinstallation:

Workable SolutionsStep-by-step Troubleshooting
Phrase 1. Create Bootable USBRun EaseUS Mac data recovery software on another Mac computer > Create bootable USB...Full steps
Phrase 2. Recover Mac DataConnect bootable USB to failed Mac > Boot computer from USB > recover data...Full steps

macOS Reinstallation Deletes Everything, What Can I Do

'My macOS Catalina got corrupted, and the login screen doesn't appear. If I reinstall macOS from the recovery menu will my previously installed software and data be deleted? And if so how can I back them up on a hard drive, the data and the software are very important to me.'

Reinstalling macOS of macOS Recovery can help you replace the current problematic OS with a clean version quickly and easily. Technically speaking, simply reinstalling macOS won't erase your disk either delete files. You probably don't need to erase, unless you're selling or giving away your Mac or having an issue that requires you to wipe. Besides, If you suspect there's something wrong with your startup drive, you can use the Disk Utility to scan and repair them from the recovery screen, which might be a quicker and more convenient alternative than erasing and reinstalling your macOS.

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How to Recover Data When Mac Needs to Be Erased and Reinstall macOS

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If you're encountering the same issue as said at the beginning of the article, that your computer gets corrupted, and you have to consider a complete restart in Recovery Mode. At this time, you need to use the Disk Utility in macOS Recovery to erase your Mac hard drive first, and go on to reinstall the macOS.

As well all know, erasing the hard disk on Mac will inevitably cause data loss and make the files unrecoverable. How to recover data in the easiest way when Mac failed to start? Don't worry, here comes the EaseUS Mac data recovery software, which enables you to create a bootable USB drive on another Mac that works well, then, restart your Mac from it, and go ahead to recover files. Especially to restore data on system drive under macOS 10.13, it's very safe to recover from bootable media. Useful for any emergency, no secondary data damage!

Now, follow the step-by-step guides below to see how to recover data from Mac that fail to start and need to erase and reinstall OS. The whole tutorials will be divided into two parts: how to create a USB bootable media and how to recover data from bootable media.

How to Create a USB Bootable Media

Step 1. Install and run EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard for Mac on another Mac computer, select 'File' > 'Create Bootable USB'. Then, choose a USB drive to create the bootable disc.

Warning
The creator will prompt to erase the drive to reallocate the space, then it can write the bootable files to this drive. Please back up all USB files with EaseUS Todo Backup for Mac before processing 'Eraser'.

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Step 2. The program starts to create a 2GB space and save the boot files. The rest space on the USB can be still used for storage.

Step 3. Once it completes, please follow the guide to boot the corrupted Mac from the bootable disc and start the recovery. We suggest you restore the data to an external hard drive.

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How to Recover Data from Mac Hard Disk

Step 1. Select the disk location (it can be an internal HDD/SSD or a removable storage device) where you lost data and files. Click the 'Scan' button.

Step 2. EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard for Mac will immediately scan your selected disk volume and display the scanning results on the left pane.

Step 3. In the scan results, select the file(s) and click the 'Recover Now' button to have them back.

After the data recovery, you can use the 'Disk Utility' to erase your Mac disk, and then choose 'Reinstall macOS' to finish the reinstalling.

See More about EaseUS Data Recovery Wizard for Mac

EaseUS Mac data recovery program allows you to recover deleted files from the emptied trash bin, internal/external hard drive, SSD, corrupted or formatted memory card, including memory sticks, SD cards, CF cards, XD & MMC cards. Besides, it also enables you to recover lost Word, Excel, PPT, etc.