Apple Unveils Latest Beta Of Mac OS X Leopard To Developers
Jun 11th, 2007 | By James Lewin | Category: GeneralApple today unveiled a near final version of Mac OS X Leopard, the sixth major release of the Mac operating system. Scheduled to ship in October, Leopard introduces over 300 new features, including:
- a new Desktop and Dock with Stacks, an intuitive new way to organize files;
- an updated Finder featuring Cover Flow and a new way to easily browse and share files between multiple Macs;
- Quick Look, a new way to rapidly preview most files without opening an application;
- Time Machine, a new way to easily and automatically back up and restore lost files or a complete Mac;
- Spaces, a powerful new feature to create groups of applications and instantly switch between them; and
- enhanced iChat and Mail applications, which easily allow users to communicate even more creatively.
“Leopard is the best release of Mac OS X to date, surpassing even Tiger, and will further extend Mac OS X’s leadership as the most advanced and innovative operating system in the world,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “We think current and prospective customers are going to love Leopard, and that it will help make the Mac even more popular.”
Leopard includes a completely new Dock featuring Stacks, which can help manage a user‚Äôs desktop clutter caused by browser and email downloads. With the click of a mouse, users can instantly fan out the contents of a stack to easily see each item. Leopard‚Äôs Finder has been completely redesigned, adding Cover Flow as an innovative way to quickly browse and locate files and applications. Finder‚Äôs new Sidebar simplifies the organization of files on a Mac, and adds easy access to shared Macs and PCs on a home network. Subscribers to .Mac can also use the new ‚ÄúBack to my Mac” feature to browse and access files on their remote Macs over the Internet. Also new in Leopard is Quick Look, an innovative new way for users to instantly preview almost any file, and even play media files, without opening an application.
With just a one-click setup, Time Machine automatically keeps an up-to-date copy of everything on the Mac. In the event a file is lost, users can use Mac OS X’s Spotlight™ to search back through time to find and then instantly restore the file. Time Machine can automatically back up a Mac to an external hard drive connected with a FireWire or USB cable, to a server, or wirelessly to an AirPort Extreme base station with an attached hard drive.
Leopard also includes three new technologies that take full advantage of the latest developments in processor hardware: full native 64-bit support to enable applications to take complete advantage of 64-bit processing while still running side by side with existing 32-bit Mac OS X applications and drivers; easy multi-core optimization and scheduling to take advantage of the latest Intel hardware; and Core Animation, helping developers easily create animated user experiences as amazing as Leopard’s Spaces and Time Machine in their own applications.
Other new features in Leopard include:
- Leopard Mail, offering more ways to customize and add personal style to email than ever before, with more than 30 beautiful stationery designs and layouts that look great on a Mac or Windows PC; Notes, making it as easy to take and organize notes as it is to compose and read emails; To Dos, for creating lists viewed directly in Mail and automatically sync them with iCal®; and data detectors that automatically sense phone numbers, addresses and events so they can be easily added to Address Book or iCal;
- Leopard iChat with iChat Theater, letting users present photos, presentations, videos and files in a video conference; Photo Booth effects, enabling users to transform their iChat video in real time with fun distortion and color effects; and video backdrops that allow users to choose any photo or video that makes them appear to be anywhere in the world, or out of it;
- Leopard iCal, introducing powerful group calendaring features based on the open CalDAV standard that make it easy to organize and coordinate schedules with other people;
- Spaces, giving users a powerful new, clutter-free way to create customized spaces on the desktop with only the applications or files needed for each project, and the ability to quickly switch between them with one click of a mouse or keystroke;
- Web Clip, bringing anything that a user wants from a web page to Dashboard as a live widget;
- Boot Camp, making it possible to run Windows natively on Intel-based Macs*; and
- new development tools, including Xcode® 3 with a next generation editor; an all new Interface Builder for easier integration of advanced animation effects into an application; simpler debugging; and support for Objective-C 2.0; DashCode, a better way to create new Dashboard widgets without writing a line of code; and Xray, a new application for optimizing application performance.
Pricing & Availability
Mac OS X version 10.5 Leopard is scheduled to ship in October and will be available through the Apple Store® (www.apple.com), Apple’s retail stores and Apple Authorized Resellers for a suggested retail price of $129 (US) for a single user license. The Mac OS X Leopard Family Pack is a single-residence, five-user license that will be available for a suggested retail price of $199 (US). Volume and maintenance pricing is available from Apple.
Is this blog an Apple News blog or a Podcasting News blog? Four Apple-related posts today, and only one of them (digital movie rentals) should appear here, and even that one is a bit of a stretch.
Mack
That’s a fair criticism, but we’ve found that a lot of our readers are interested in Apple-related news because they use Macs to create their podcasts, iMovie to edit their video podcasts, iTunes to subscribe to podcasts, Garageband to edit their podcasts and iPods and Apple TV to view them.
Podcasters need to understand the viability of the Apple TV platform, because it’s currently one of the most promising options for bringing Internet video to the TV.
The iPhone also could be very important to podcasting, because it promises to be the first iPod that you can sync wirelessly. If it’s successful, this could change the way people think about and use podcasts.
In the past, we’ve also devoted a lot of space to Microsoft’s Zune, because it promised to introduced more competition into the portable media player space:
https://www.podcasting-news.com/tag/zune/
We do feature a lot more Apple news than Windows news, though. This may be disproportionate to the size of the platform, but Apple is doing much more in the area of new media than Microsoft.
We’ll try to get a bit more podcasting info in today, though!
Sorry to be critical, but I like coming to Podcasting News because usually I find something different! Everybody is covering Apple today. You can’t open a browser without seeing the news! Usually when you guys cover Apple stuff, you do so with a podcasting slant which is great. Today’s posts read more like press releases though, and aren’t much different than the reports at dozens of other sites.
Anyway, thanks for the response! I look forward to more of your usual, well-written podcasting-related posts 🙂
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[…] Maybe it was the Leopard update. While Leopard looks like it will feature nice refinements to OS X, enhancements don’t wow, especially enhancements that most people won’t see for months. […]