T,FTFY :)

Seriously, how many people on here are Mac developers with significant 
experience targeting native OS X APIs, and how many have significant experience 
using Macs as Unix-based workstations with a true, integrated desktop? Think of 
significant as "going back to before the last few, free iterations of the OS".
I wouldn't even call myself the former (I just have a working experience with 
the native APIs) but I'm very much the latter.

All contributions are welcome esp. on platforms where there is very little 
support, but IMVHO, people not in either category shouldn't be making official 
design decisions for the platform in question (and that applies not just to Mac 
/ Mac OS X).

I'd advise very strongly to get, install a number of commercial big software 
suites (MS Office, Adobe Creative, etc) and study how they are installed and 
where they put things. Both examples exist on multiple platforms, and MS Office 
is actually very well written for OS X.

As to DBus: it's not just a piece of foreign software that happens to work on 
OS X, but is actively developed for that OS. There is nothing "anti-mac" in 
using it.

R.
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