I seem to be having a different experience with Lion than many here. I too was 
reluctant to change my way of scrolling, or to give up on using Rosetta apps, 
and so had not yet upgraded to Lion. I usually grab OSX updates very early on 
(as a piece of trivia, I was the first person anywhere, including the OS team 
themselves, to be running Mac OS 7 full time), but this time I held off, until 
there came appoint when I wanted to try publishing to iPad Retina. Then I 
didn't have a choice. At first I ran it on an external SSD drive, and found 
that the apps I needed to use ran fine, and that adjusting to the gestural 
based scrolling took no time at all. It's also very nice to be able to swipe 
left or right to go through your browser history, instead of having to mouse 
over to click on the arrow buttons. The pinch to zoom of web pages is good too.

Having got a little used to Lion I then felt better about trying out Mountain 
Lion. My current setup is that I have 10.8 on my internal SSD, and still have 
10.7.4 on the external SSD. I still need that because under 10.8 you can't 
publish iOS apps, as it's using the prerelease Xcode 3.4. With this setup I am 
able to run, as an example, Mail, Safari, Xcode, Director, Flash, LiveCode, 
Parallels, and IE and SketchUp under Parallels, all without any slowing down on 
my 4GB MacBook Air. I can get by with that!
_______________________________________________
use-livecode mailing list
use-livecode@lists.runrev.com
Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription 
preferences:
http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-livecode

Reply via email to