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In Mac Classic each folder you opened created a new window which remembered all of its settings for size, position on screen, scroll position, icon size/layout, etc. This window is an explicit and exclusive representation of that particular folder and attempting to open the same folder again does not create a new window, it simply shifts the focus to the already-open window. The change in Mac OS X towards a browser for navigating the filesystem hierarchy caused an active debate over spatial[0] vs. navigation (or browser)[1] file managers.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spatial_file_manager

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_manager#Navigational_file...



Ars did an amazing series of articles about the (IMO) missteps made in OS X, and presented a theoretical design that would satisfy both Mac Classic fans and fans of "browser-based" windowing systems.

http://arstechnica.com/apple/2003/04/finder/2/

Any software developer interested in designing usable software should read and digest this. Alas, nobody working at Apple did, so I'm no longer an Apple customer.


Thank you for this! I vaguely alluded to this (active debate) in my comment but I had forgotten the source. I'm going to read through this now! :)


Very interesting, thank you.




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