Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 8 years ago
[deleted comment]
I'd have to disagree with marcantoineboucher. The idea of a prefpane sounds
nice to me - considering the
application itself only launches a preference window when run. Seems to be a
bit more appropriate place for
such a thing, though it would change the installation from "drag to a folder"
to "double click the .prefPane file". I
don't imagine that would change the complexity of installation or use much.
Original comment by broken0chaos@gmail.com
on 6 Jul 2009 at 7:39
I also support moving it to a prefpane. I have my applications folder as a
stack on my dock, so it would be nice
to make it a bit smaller by moving an application that is never run directly by
its icon.
Original comment by jarvik7
on 7 Jul 2009 at 3:17
If it doesn't become a prefpane, I imagine you could fix that minor annoyance
by dropping it into the Utilities
folder, right? (That's where I've put it... I don't *think* there's a reason to
not put it there - I haven't had any
problems anyway. ;)
Original comment by broken0chaos@gmail.com
on 7 Jul 2009 at 2:43
Even Apple has removed the QuickTime preference pane in Snow Leopard. Since the
Unarchiver is not a plugin,
nor a MacFUSE FS, but a helper application, it makes no sense to implement it
as a pref pane. It might make
sense to package it as a disk image with a symlink to the Utilities folder to
ease installation.
Original comment by yuan...@gmail.com
on 15 Jul 2009 at 4:27
Original comment by paracel...@gmail.com
on 20 Jul 2009 at 4:25
yuan0qi, Hazel, TextExpander, Growl, Automatic, Perian and other applications
that mostly interact with the
happenings of your system are all prefpane. This is a system wide replacement
for most. The reason there is no
prefpane for Apple's unzipper is because it's built into the system. The
Unarchiver needs to be a prefpane app.
Original comment by csuro...@gmail.com
on 15 Sep 2009 at 10:49
I agree with @yuan0qi. Very few applications /need/ to be a pref pane. The ones
you mention are totally
different from The Unarchiver and Apple's archive helper. In all those cases,
the pref pane is about managing
behavior of the application itself. I actually think a pref pane is much less
intuitive than a standalone app. When
set as the default app for various archive types, the app need not even be in
/Applications — I put it in
/Applications/Utilities, like broken0chaos. (The argument that BOMArchiveHelper
is not a pref pane "because it's
built into the system" is untenable — all of the default pref panes are
"built in" as well.)
Original comment by quinntay...@mac.com
on 24 Sep 2009 at 4:02
Original comment by paracel...@gmail.com
on 16 Sep 2012 at 7:18
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
paracel...@gmail.com
on 3 Jul 2009 at 3:30