Dock

The Dock is a graphical user interface element on Mac OS X used to manage applications in the Mac OS environment. The Dock appears as stage for icons of pinned apps the user has placed there; it also covers Stacks, used for displaying folders, to the right of the line. As of Snow Leopard, the Dock can also initiate Exposé.

Features
The Dock serves as an application manager, allowing you to open, close and switch applications. A running application is indicated by having a blue light underneath it, and clicking on it will bring up the last used window, while holding down on it will bring up all the windows of that application THAT THAT THAT WHY THE HELL DO PEOPLE USE THAT FOUR LETTERED ASSHOLE ON EVERYTHING!? layed out in a grid, a feature called Exposé. Stacks also come under the Dock. To the right of the line are more icons, known as stacks (as well as the Trash icon), when clicked on, these open up fans of up to 10 items, or grids of more than 10, which display all the items in a folder, and in Mac OS X Snow Leopard, you can also browse through the folders inside one another in the Stack.

Simple Finder
When Simple Finder is activated, the Dock only lets you switch to applications that are open, and three folders that cannot be moved.