Re: Preview

2005-11-01 Thread Peter da Silva
Not that any platform is substantially better at this. Traditional UNIX apps used to look for files with the right extensions but happily ignore them if you told them otherwise, with a few exceptions (eg, the old trick of linking "tty.c" to "/dev/tty" so you could type code in and avoid creat

Re: Preview

2005-11-01 Thread Peter da Silva
On Oct 31, 2005, at 3:34 PM, Luke Kanies wrote: This is exactly the kind of absolute stupidity that I feared when Apple announced their retarded "we're going to store important metadata in the file name" policy. It's less retarded than the "we're going to store important data (including the

Re: Preview

2005-11-01 Thread Luke Kanies
On Tue, 1 Nov 2005, Daniel Pittman wrote: > Bah. This is exactly the same hate as it was when Apple used to store > important metadata in their special little eight bytes somewhere other > than the filename. While I won't disagree with the technical truth of that, the previous system had a kind

Re: Preview

2005-11-01 Thread Daniel Pittman
Luke Kanies writes: > On Mon, 31 Oct 2005, Nicholas Clark wrote: [...] > But the thing I'm writing about, the thing that pissed me off the most, is > that it would literally refuse to acknowledge a file full of VCards because > that file did not have the right extension. Even dragging the stupi