Talk:Extension conflict

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"Extension conflicts came to an end with the release of Mac OS X, which does not use extensions."

Then what do we call a kext? Isn't that an extension of a sort?

"Especially System 7": As I recall, extensions were not a problem under System 7. The extensions supplied with the system were few and well named, so by glancing over your extensions folder, you knew what was going on in there. However, beginning with Mac OS 7.5.3 (which introduced OpenTransport), the system of shared libraries (such as OpenTransport) began to spread to the Mac OS and installers started to dump dozens of vaguely named things (which usually didn't bear a comment tag of any value) into the extensions folder. By MacOS 8.5 / 9, the extensions folder indeed had become an enigma that for the first time temped MacOS-users to "clean install" their system because of the appearently impossible task of tidying up this mess.

[edit] Improvements

Why does "Extensions Manager" redirect to here? I would like it to have a separate article with History. I remember the original Extensions Manager before Apple acquired it and included it with the OS. Connectionfailure (talk) 08:08, 18 March 2008 (UTC)