Shapes Of Gray Mac OS
Date: 08 August, 2013
Downloads: 43
Size: 34.4 MB
License: Shareware
36 Games like Just Shapes & Beats for Mac OS, daily generated comparing over 40 000 video games across all platforms. This list includes Conga Master, Flat Heroes, CounterAttack, Just Shapes. I have been using windows laptops or desktops for about the 15 years of my life, and I wanted the Air simply because of Mac OS. Wedge shape of the air.
Wireless Keyboard for Mac, Seenda Full Size Wireless Keyboard Compatible with Mac OS - Space Grey Visit the seenda Store. 3.4 out of 5 stars 14 ratings. Currently unavailable. Ergonomic Shape with Hyper-Fast Scrolling and USB Unifying Receiver for Computer and Laptop - Black. Soundtoys 5 brings together our entire range of audio effects into one powerful collection. Includes all 21 Soundtoys plug-ins. See the full list. Saturate, compress, and distort with Decapitator, Radiator, and Devil-Loc. Get a virtual history of echo and delay hardware with EchoBoy and PrimalTap.
Category: Audio & Multimedia / Audio File Players
Date: 09 October, 2012
Downloads: 2
Size: 59.0 MB
License: Shareware
Category: Graphic Apps / Other
Date: 06 April, 2013
Downloads: 2
Size: 5.4 MB
License: Shareware
Category: Business / Math & Scientific Tools
Date: 09 September, 2008
Downloads: 10
Size: 1000.0 KB
License: Freeware
Date: 09 September, 2008
Downloads: 14
Size: 1000.0 KB
License: Freeware
Date: 23 August, 2011
Downloads: 96
Size: 39.7 MB
License: Shareware
Shapes Of Gray Mac Os X
Category: Graphic Apps / Drawing & Painting
Date: 09 June, 2012
Downloads: 0
Size: 3.1 MB
License: Shareware
Category: Graphic Apps / Viewers
Date: 07 May, 2013
Downloads: 16
Size: 58.2 MB
License: Shareware
Category: Audio & Multimedia / Music Composers
Date: 23 October, 2013
Downloads: 6
Size: 75.7 MB
License: Shareware
Date: 14 January, 2009
Downloads: 9
Size: 45.0 KB
License: Freeware
Category: Network & Internet / Tools & Utilities
Date: 11 August, 2012
Downloads: 0
Size: 3.1 MB
License: Freeware
Category: Graphic Apps / CAD
Date: 03 October, 2012
Downloads: 0
Size: 52.0 KB
License: Freeware
Category: Graphic Apps / CAD
Date: 28 August, 2012
Downloads: 0
Size: 61.4 KB
License: Freeware
A 3D Iterated Function System screen saver module for Mac OS X. Clouds of points which form into swirling shapes, and then explode into clouds again. Rotating, gear-like shapes twisting into new shapes.
Category: Screen Savers / Other
Date: 24 July, 2012
Downloads: 15
Size: 0
License: Demo
Category: Graphic Apps / Other
Date: 06 October, 2012
Downloads: 0
Size: 225.3 KB
License: Freeware
Category: Graphic Apps / Icon Tools
Date: 30 April, 2012
Downloads: 5
Size: 614.4 KB
License: Shareware
Category: Home & Hobby / Other
Date: 30 July, 2012
Downloads: 7
Size: 10.2 MB
License: Shareware
It requires a decent graphics card!
Date: 02 November, 2013
Downloads: 6
Size: 0
License: Shareware
Children will learn early maths concepts and develop musical awareness by joining in the fun. Every activity is curriculum-based and fully
Date: 22 October, 2007
Downloads: 25
Size: 2.8 MB
License: Shareware
Category: Graphic Apps
Date: 08 February, 2009
Downloads: 37
Size: 2.1 MB
License: Shareware
Category: Screen Savers / Holiday
Date: 22 February, 2011
Downloads: 29
Size: 1.9 MB
License: Demo
Category: Web Development / Other
Date: 21 August, 2011
Downloads: 101
Size: 40.2 MB
License: Shareware
Category: Graphic Apps / Animation Tools
Date: 19 January, 2012
Downloads: 4
Size: 14.6 MB
License: Shareware
Category: Desktop / Icons
Date: 19 September, 2013
Downloads: 0
Size: 1.9 MB
License: Demo
Category: Web Development / Other
Date: 02 July, 2014
Downloads: 0
Size: 10.9 MB
License: Shareware
Category: Desktop / Icons
Apple Computer, Inc. in no way endorses or is affiliated with MacShareware.com.
Apple, the Apple logo, and Macintosh are registered trademarks and Mac OS is a trademark of Apple Computer, Inc.
Jeff Atwood asked What’s Wrong With Apple’s Font Rendering? and as I answered in the comments it comes down to philosophy:
The primary difference is that Microsoft try to align everything to whole pixels vertically and sub-pixels horizontally.
Apple just scale the font naturally – sometimes it fits into whole pixels other times it doesn’t.
This means Windows looks sharper at the expense of not actually being a very accurate representation of the text. The Mac with it’s design/DTP background is a much more accurate representation and scales more naturally than Windows which consequently jumps around a lot vertically.
Jeff and Joel both wrote follow up posts agreeing that it is one of philosophy but both are of the opinion that the Windows pixel-grid approach is the better whilst our displays are only capable of low dots-per-inch (DPI).
What they don’t seem to appreciate is the compromise this causes.
Here is an example of Times New Roman on Windows (left) and Mac OS (right) scaled over whole point sizes with sub-pixel precision:
The two thing to note here arising from this “pixel-grid is king” approach are
- Windows does not scale fonts linearly as the rough line points out
- Windows scales the height and width but not the weight of the font
Neither of these may matter to a casual user but for professionals preparing material destined for high DPI (film or print) then it’s a world of difference. How can you layout a page on-screen and expect the same result on the page when the font isn’t the same width?
The issue is reminiscent of the “I hate black bars on wide-screen films” brigade who believe that the film should be chopped, panned, scaled and otherwise distorted from the artists original intention simply so that it fits better on their display.
Typography has a rich and interesting history developed and honed over centuries. It is a shame to misrepresent typefaces especially as the pixel-grid approach becomes less relevant as displays reach higher resolutions.
Update
Some additional comparisons and a note that the gamma differences between Windows and Mac will affect how you see the “other” systems rendering on your machine.
Further update (21 August 2007)
Shapes Of Gray Mac Os X
Thanks to Daring Fireball and ZDNet we’ve had a few more great comments which I’ve summarized here:
George thinks the philosophy idea is wrong because “What percentage of Mac users sit around all day doing nothing but pre-press work?” but as Fred points out Microsoft’s desktop-user optimized rendering ends up on images and videos all over the web, thus escaping the environment for which it was crippled.
George also claims that Vista’s rendering is improved, I can’t vouch for that one way or another but from looking at his screen shots the difference there could simply be the contrast level as adjusted by the ClearType tuner.
Nathaniel believes that it’s not Microsoft’s job to manipulate a typeface and that if you want on-screen readability then choose a font designed for that such as Microsoft’s own Tahoma or Apple’s Lucida Grande.
I’d go further and say that Microsoft’s own aggression in sticking to the grid kills font choice at the regular reading size of 10/11 point by optimizing everything to a generic sans or serif look:
Windows XP
Mac OS X
James points to an article called Texts Rasterization Exposures that proposes a combination of using vertical hinting only and calculating horizontally to 256 levels and has some convincing screen-shots showing the benefits. Probably too late for Leopard or Vista SP1 though.
[)amien