Linked by Kroc Camen on Thu 4th Dec 2008 18:20 UTC
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You need to understand how Mac apps work. Everything is in the one file. It's not like Windows where one app has parts in Program Files, DLLs in System 32, and then stuff in the Registry, and in other cases yet more in Common Files...
Everything is not in one file! It may look like a file to you but it is a directory, a special one, but a directory none the less.
Remember that this size includes all the translations -- something you don't get with many Windows apps, if at all
And which, with the exception of a maximum of one translation, are completely worthless and a waste of time and space.
Linux users used to have to sit through endless rounds watching:
blah_blah_enGB
blah_blah_enUS
blah_blah_sp
blah blah_de
blah_blah_tw
blah_blah_se
...
scroll by endlessly on installations and updates. Thank the deities that be that Linux distros finally got a clue.
Mac apps really do this?





Member since:
2005-11-10
You need to understand how Mac apps work. Everything is in the one file. It's not like Windows where one app has parts in Program Files, DLLs in System 32, and then stuff in the Registry, and in other cases yet more in Common Files...
If you had continued reading - you would have noticed that the very next line says that iTunes is 129 MB.
Remember that this size includes all the translations -- something you don't get with many Windows apps, if at all -- as well as all of the open source libraries (like GStreamer) that have to be bundled because Songbird is not a native OS X app, using the native APIs.
I think you're doing yourself a disfavour by taking the file size into account, especially given that either a) you don't use a Mac AND/OR b) you never compared the file size to any of the other apps on the Mac.