Earlier this summer I decided that I needed to actually get on with it and spend the money to upgrade to Mac's latest OS, Leopard. I know. I took my time, this upgrade being released ot the market over a year ago. But since then, I've found it interesting how it has changed how I use and search my computer. As with many other people, my hard drive is large and getting more full each day. Stuffed with everything: podcasts, video files, tons of documents and pdf files, I often have a hard time finding things. "Now where did I file that?" sometimes turns into my favourite question.
This is where Leopard is interesting.
In all of the years that I've used a computer, the OS has always just had a generic icon that stood for each type of file. A little rectangle with a stylized "W" on it for a Word document, another rectangle that stood for a pdf file, etc. But Leopard actually gives you a small preview shot of your file as the icon.
For example, this is a small group of documents that are sitting on my desktop right now:

While they are all pdf files, it is interesting to see that what you actually get is a tiny screenshot of the actual cover of the documents. Here is another small group sitting on my desktop:

This is a different group, having a combination of four different things. But again, the .png file, the pdf, and the .doc are actually previews of what these documents look like.
Why is this significant? This is important to me because in the month that I have had Leopard, I'm finding it much easier to find things on my computer visually instead of by having to only remember the name of the file. Now, if I have a rough idea of the file name, I use the cover flow view (similar to what you get in iTunes) and flip through folders and files, looking for what the file looks like. Between remembering a partial name or a folder where something just might be located and what the file actually looks like, there is a much better chance I might actually find a half forgotten artefact.

How will this effect student computer use? What does this say about my learning style and how how I do things?
Just as in a previous post, I spent some reflecting on how the Mac, Windows, and Linux OS may reflect a different philosophy in the classroom, I now wonder about how an OS like this may reflect a changing, complex idea of literacy. One where visual elements are much more important and stand directly beside the print that has traditionally carried information. Much of this stems from the web itself, where many pages are a complex jumble of visual, print, and even animated or audio elements in a single space. Teaching students to navigate these spaces is something that needs to be considered in classrooms as they are very different from a novel or other piece of written text. The combination of elements makes these spaces much more open to people who gather information in different ways, but it also makes them more visually complex and difficult to navigate.
I think this changing OS reflects this change in our concept of being literate. It gives us choice in how we want our information displayed. It gives us multiple types of cues and it looks familiar to people who spend a lot of time online. Complex literacies. Complex choices. Changing perceptions.
Tags: Apple, OS, literacy, classrooms, information