Funny, I use four "apps" more than any other software on my computer: Shell, Emacs, Firefox, Thunderbird. That's it. Sure, every now and then, I'll run some other program, say, Evince, Synaptic, Nautilus, or occasionally even The Gimp... but frankly compared to my usage of the other four, everything else is statistical noise.
The development tools I work with every day are either accessible from within Emacs or I run them from the Shell. In other words: I'm old school.
Anyway - my point is: the original post was how Mac OS provides less distractions, and your argument of having more apps available seems to claim the opposite.
The development tools I work with every day are either accessible from within Emacs or I run them from the Shell. In other words: I'm old school.
Anyway - my point is: the original post was how Mac OS provides less distractions, and your argument of having more apps available seems to claim the opposite.