• bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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    1 day ago

    You can drag it somewhere else or run it from the DMG? You can run apps outside that folder…

    It’s not “dragging the .dmg into your Applications folder”, you mount the .DMG then drag the .app inside and move it where you like (a shortcut to your /Applications is provided)

    The DMG also gives it compression. It’s not an “installer”, it’s more a form of zip file. Like a .zip it allows publishers to bundle guides, photos, etc.

    Besides the “just drag” method is so much better than clicking through an installation wizard. But some apps use .PKG files which is an installer wizard.

    There’s tons of legitimate arguments made against macOS but this seems like just unfamiliarity.

    • gila@lemm.ee
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      2 hours ago

      I’ve been prompted to manually drag the app into the Applications folder during install flow multiple times. It wasn’t a substitute for an installation wizard, it was a part of it. I’m familiar with archives as well as .debs, .rpms and tarballs, and none of these or Windows equivalents required such interaction. Yeah, it’s due to my unfamiliarity. In my state of being relatively unfamiliar with Mac OS, it seems pretty fucking weird.

    • fluckx@lemmy.world
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      16 hours ago

      The uninstall on a Mac just leaves a ton of garbage behind though. Dragging an app to the trashcan to uninstall is somewhat intuitive, but doesn’t remove the app from startup. Which is a bit messy because then I need to install software to clean that up.

      Windows isn’t necessarily a lot better on that front, but it feels better ( the cleanup part )

      • bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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        16 hours ago

        AFAIK if an app was installed by dragging it to Applications, there’s no way it could still run after you delete it. The actual executable is contained within the .app file.

        It is true that uninstalled apps can leave files behind in other places though. Which is a problem on all platforms.

        • fluckx@lemmy.world
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          13 hours ago

          Yes. It’s not running anymore. But the entry lingered in the startup section ( for whatever reason ).

          I’ve also had a case where starting my Mac gave me “file cannot be found” notification, and that was also related to software that was removed. Running a cleanup tool removed entries I couldn’t remove myself (ui) and the error disappeared.